Abstract. Laboratory and free-ranging studies on the emu, ostrich and kiwi show ratites to be competent homeotherms. While body temperature and basal metabolic rate are lower in ratites than other birds, all of the thermoregulatory adaptations present in other birds are well established in ratites. The thermoneutral zone has been established for the emu and kiwi, and extends to 10°C. Below that zone, homeothermy is achieved via the efficient use of insulation and elevated metabolic heat production. In the heat, emus and ostriches increase respiratory evaporative water loss and use some cutaneous water loss. Respiratory alkalosis is avoided by reducing tidal volume. In severe heat, tidal volume increases, but the emu becomes hypoxic and hypo...
© 2016 Cambridge Philosophical Society The avian bill is a textbook example of how evolution shapes ...
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are metabolic hormones that regulate physiological and behavioural responses t...
Abstract In homeothermic birds and mammals, several thermoregulatory adaptations have evolved for su...
Birds live an energetically-expensive lifestyle as they are mostly small, diurnal and use flight. Ho...
The ability of birds and mammals to maintain a relatively stable internal body temperature while und...
Endotherms, unlike ectotherms, generate metabolic heat to meet their thermoregulatory demands. As ho...
Evaporative heat loss pathways vary among avian orders, but the extent to which evaporative cooling ...
The osprey (Pandion haliaetus) is a cosmopolitan and long-distant migrant, found at all thermal extr...
Few environmental factors have a larger influence on animal energetics than temperature, a fact that...
Global warming increasingly challenges thermoregulation in endothermic animals, particularly in hot ...
1. Facultative hyperthermia, the elevation of body temperature above normothermic levels, during ...
In this study I measured resting metabolic rate (RMR), costs of thermoregulation, and specific dynam...
The physiological response to variation in air temperature (T-a) can provide insights into how anima...
The ability to maintain a (relatively) stable body temperature in a wide range of thermal environmen...
Birds show phylogenetic variation in the relative importance of respiratory versus cutaneous evapora...
© 2016 Cambridge Philosophical Society The avian bill is a textbook example of how evolution shapes ...
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are metabolic hormones that regulate physiological and behavioural responses t...
Abstract In homeothermic birds and mammals, several thermoregulatory adaptations have evolved for su...
Birds live an energetically-expensive lifestyle as they are mostly small, diurnal and use flight. Ho...
The ability of birds and mammals to maintain a relatively stable internal body temperature while und...
Endotherms, unlike ectotherms, generate metabolic heat to meet their thermoregulatory demands. As ho...
Evaporative heat loss pathways vary among avian orders, but the extent to which evaporative cooling ...
The osprey (Pandion haliaetus) is a cosmopolitan and long-distant migrant, found at all thermal extr...
Few environmental factors have a larger influence on animal energetics than temperature, a fact that...
Global warming increasingly challenges thermoregulation in endothermic animals, particularly in hot ...
1. Facultative hyperthermia, the elevation of body temperature above normothermic levels, during ...
In this study I measured resting metabolic rate (RMR), costs of thermoregulation, and specific dynam...
The physiological response to variation in air temperature (T-a) can provide insights into how anima...
The ability to maintain a (relatively) stable body temperature in a wide range of thermal environmen...
Birds show phylogenetic variation in the relative importance of respiratory versus cutaneous evapora...
© 2016 Cambridge Philosophical Society The avian bill is a textbook example of how evolution shapes ...
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are metabolic hormones that regulate physiological and behavioural responses t...
Abstract In homeothermic birds and mammals, several thermoregulatory adaptations have evolved for su...