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Eurasian
Blackcap image credit and copyright: Cezary
Pioro; czarli70@interia.pl; http://www.cezarypioro.plCollecting migrating blackcaps at their stopover site on the Sede Boqer Campus of Ben-Gurion University, Wojciechowski and Pinshow weighed the birds and monitored their body temperatures and metabolic rates as the birds stocked up on fruit supplemented with mealworms. During the day the birds' body temperatures hovered around 42.5°C, but as dusk fell, their temperatures began to drop. The average normal body temperature at night was about 38.8°C, while one particularly skinny individual's temperature plummeted to 33°C. And when the team plotted the birds' body masses against their nocturnal body temperatures, the smaller birds' (<16.3 g) temperatures correlated with their body masses but the larger birds' (>16.3 g) body temperatures did not.
Finally, the team looked at the relationship between the birds' temperatures and their metabolic rates and found that the heavier birds dropped their metabolic rates least, while the lightest birds dropped their metabolic rates most. Some conserved a remarkable 30% of their energy by becoming hypothermic.
Knowing that small birds also conserve energy by huddling together for warmth, Wojciechowski and Pinshow suggest that migrating birds may combine both strategies to shorten refuelling stopovers to fatten up fast before hastening on their way.
Contact: Kathryn Knight, the Journal of Experimental Biology, Cambridge, UK. email: kathryn@biologists.com
SOURCE: THE JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY http://jeb.biologists.org