Abstract
Studies have only recently begun to underline the importance of including data on the physiological flexibility of a species when modelling its vulnerability to extinction from climate change. We investigated the effects of a 4°C increase in ambient temperature (Ta), similar to that predicted for southern Africa by the year 2080, on certain physiological variables of a 10-12 g passerine bird endemic to southern Africa, the Cape white-eye Zosterops virens. There was no significant difference in resting metabolism, body mass and intraperitoneal body temperature between birds housed indoors at 4°C above outside ambient temperature and those housed indoors at outside ambient temperature. We conclude that the physiological flexibility of Cape white-eyes will aid them in coping with the 4°C increase predicted for their range by 2080.
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Thompson, L. J., Brown, M., & Downs, C. T. (2015). The potential effects of climate-change-associated temperature increases on the metabolic rate of a small Afrotropical bird. Journal of Experimental Biology, 218(10), 1504–1512. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.116509
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