evaporative water loss
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Author(s):  
Vinícius de França Carvalho Fonsêca ◽  
Roberto Gomes da Silva ◽  
Gustavo A. B. Moura ◽  
Edward P. Snelling ◽  
Andrea Fuller ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Liam P. McGuire ◽  
Nathan W. Fuller ◽  
Yvonne A. Dzal ◽  
Catherine G. Haase ◽  
Brandon J. Klüg-Baerwald ◽  
...  

AbstractHibernation is widespread among mammals in a variety of environmental contexts. However, few experimental studies consider interspecific comparisons, which may provide insight into general patterns of hibernation strategies. We studied 13 species of free-living bats, including populations spread over thousands of kilometers and diverse habitats. We measured torpid metabolic rate (TMR) and evaporative water loss (two key parameters for understanding hibernation energetics) across a range of temperatures. There was no difference in minimum TMR among species (i.e., all species achieved similarly low torpid metabolic rate) but the temperature associated with minimum TMR varied among species. The minimum defended temperature (temperature below which TMR increased) varied from 8 °C to < 2 °C among species. Conversely, evaporative water loss varied among species, with species clustered in two groups representing high and low evaporative water loss. Notably, species that have suffered population declines due to white-nose syndrome fall in the high evaporative water loss group and less affected species in the low evaporative water loss group. Documenting general patterns of physiological diversity, and associated ecological implications, contributes to broader understanding of biodiversity, and may help predict which species are at greater risk of environmental and anthropogenic stressors.


Author(s):  
Jean‐François Le Galliard ◽  
Chloé Chabaud ◽  
Denis Otávio Vieira Andrade ◽  
François Brischoux ◽  
Miguel A. Carretero ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 224 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily S. Choy ◽  
Ryan S. O'Connor ◽  
H. Grant Gilchrist ◽  
Anna L. Hargreaves ◽  
Oliver P. Love ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The Arctic is warming at approximately twice the global rate, with well-documented indirect effects on wildlife. However, few studies have examined the direct effects of warming temperatures on Arctic wildlife, leaving the importance of heat stress unclear. Here, we assessed the direct effects of increasing air temperatures on the physiology of thick-billed murres (Uria lomvia), an Arctic seabird with reported mortalities due to heat stress while nesting on sun-exposed cliffs. We used flow-through respirometry to measure the response of body temperature, resting metabolic rate, evaporative water loss and evaporative cooling efficiency (the ratio of evaporative heat loss to metabolic heat production) in murres while experimentally increasing air temperature. Murres had limited heat tolerance, exhibiting: (1) a low maximum body temperature (43.3°C); (2) a moderate increase in resting metabolic rate relative that within their thermoneutral zone (1.57 times); (3) a small increase in evaporative water loss rate relative that within their thermoneutral zone (1.26 times); and (4) a low maximum evaporative cooling efficiency (0.33). Moreover, evaporative cooling efficiency decreased with increasing air temperature, suggesting murres were producing heat at a faster rate than they were dissipating it. Larger murres also had a higher rate of increase in resting metabolic rate and a lower rate of increase in evaporative water loss than smaller murres; therefore, evaporative cooling efficiency declined with increasing body mass. As a cold-adapted bird, murres' limited heat tolerance likely explains their mortality on warm days. Direct effects of overheating on Arctic wildlife may be an important but under-reported impact of climate change.


Author(s):  
Martin Hlubeň ◽  
Lukáš Kratochvíl ◽  
Lumír Gvoždík ◽  
Zuzana Starostová

Author(s):  
Nicholas B. Sakich ◽  
Glenn J. Tattersall

Whether scales reduce cutaneous evaporative water loss in lepidosaur reptiles (Superorder Lepidosauria) such as lizards and snakes has been a contentious issue for nearly half a century. Furthermore, while many studies have looked at whether dehydration affects thermal preference in lepidosaurs, far fewer have examined whether normally hydrated lepidosaurs can assess their instantaneous rate of evaporative water loss and adjust their thermal preference to compensate in an adaptive manner. We tested both of these hypotheses using three captive-bred phenotypes of bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps) sourced from the pet trade: ‘Wild Types’ with normal scalation, ‘Leatherbacks’ exhibiting scales of reduced prominence, and scaleless bearded dragons referred to as ‘Silkbacks’. Silkbacks on average lost water evaporatively at about twice the rate that Wild Types did. Leatherbacks on average were closer in their rates of evaporative water loss to Silkbacks than they were to Wild Types. Additionally, very small (at most ∼1°C) differences in thermal preference existed between the three phenotypes that were not statistically significant. This suggests a lack of plasticity in thermal preference in response to an increase in rate of evaporative water loss, and may be reflective of a thermal ‘strategy’ as employed by thermoregulating bearded dragons that prioritises immediate thermal benefits over the threat of future dehydration. The results of this study bolster an often-discounted hypothesis regarding the present adaptive function of scales and have implications for the applied fields of animal welfare and conservation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
pp. 102879
Author(s):  
Patric André Castro ◽  
Alex Sandro Campos Maia ◽  
Vinícius de França Carvalho Fonsêca ◽  
Gustavo André Bernado Moura ◽  
Cíntia Carol de Melo Costa ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 223 (23) ◽  
pp. jeb234450
Author(s):  
Christine Elizabeth Cooper ◽  
Philip Carew Withers

ABSTRACTWe present two independent lines of evidence that a tiny dasyurid marsupial, the ningaui (Ningaui spp.), has acute physiological control of its insensible evaporative water loss below and within thermoneutrality. Perturbation of the driving force for evaporation by varying relative humidity, and therefore the water vapour pressure deficit between the animal and the ambient air, does not have the expected physical effect on evaporative water loss. Exposure to a helox atmosphere also does not have the expected physical effect of increasing evaporative water loss for live ningauis (despite it having the expected effect of increasing heat loss for live ningauis), but increases evaporative water loss for dead ningauis. We discuss the relative advantages and disadvantages of both experimental approaches for demonstrating physiological control of insensible evaporative water loss. An appreciation of physiological control is important because insensible evaporative water loss contributes to both water and heat balance, is clearly under environmental selection pressure, and potentially impacts the distribution of endotherms and their response to environmental change.


2020 ◽  
Vol 223 (19) ◽  
pp. jeb229930 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Elizabeth Cooper ◽  
Philip Carew Withers ◽  
Gerhard Körtner ◽  
Fritz Geiser

ABSTRACTInsensible evaporative water loss (EWL) at or below thermoneutrality is generally assumed to be a passive physical process. However, some arid zone mammals and a single arid zone bird can control their insensible water loss, so we tested the hypothesis that the same is the case for two parrot species from a mesic habitat. We investigated red-rumped parrots (Psephotus haematonotus) and eastern rosellas (Platycercus eximius), measuring their EWL, and other physiological variables, at a range of relative humidities at ambient temperatures of 20 and 30°C (below and at thermoneutrality). We found that, despite a decrease in EWL with increasing relative humidity, rates of EWL were not fully accounted for by the water vapour deficit between the animal and its environment, indicating that the insensible EWL of both parrots was controlled. It is unlikely that this deviation from physical expectations was regulation with a primary role for water conservation because our mesic-habitat parrots had equivalent regulatory ability as the arid habitat budgerigar (Melopsittacus undulatus). This, together with our observations of body temperature and metabolic rate, instead support the hypothesis that acute physiological control of insensible water loss serves a thermoregulatory purpose for endotherms. Modification of both cutaneous and respiratory avenues of evaporation may be involved, possibly via modification of expired air temperature and humidity, and surface resistance.


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