Small Sea Birds Hold Heat Rather Than Cranking Up the Furnace
ScienceDaily (May 5, 2011) — A new study offers some clues about how small aquatic birds survive in extremely cold climates.
Staying warm is hard work for aquatic birds. Heat loss is around
twenty times greater in water than in air, so aquatic birds have to
increase their resting metabolism to generate heat on the water. Heat
loss is an even greater issue for small birds, so it was assumed that
small birds would have to increase their metabolism in water even more
than large birds do.
But according to a study by researchers at the University of
Wyoming, that's not always the case. The researchers studied the
metabolism of Cassin's auklets, a small sea bird found throughout the
Northern Pacific Ocean. They found that auklets do increase their
metabolism on the water, but not as much proportionately as some larger
birds do.In fact, ducks, auks, cormorants, and small penguins responded quite differently to air and water temperatures, perhaps reflecting very different demands during evolutionary history.
The research is published in the May/June 2011 issue of the journal Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.
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