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Tackling the Tibetan Plateau in a down suit: insights into thermoregulation by bar-headed geese during migration.

Nicole ParrCharles M BishopNyambayar BatbayarPatrick J ButlerBeverly ChuaWilliam K MilsomGraham R ScottLucy A Hawkes
Published in: The Journal of experimental biology (2019)
Birds migrating through extreme environments can experience a range of challenges while meeting the demands of flight, including highly variable ambient temperatures, humidity and oxygen levels. However, there has been limited research into avian thermoregulation during migration in extreme environments. This study aimed to investigate the effect of flight performance and high altitude on body temperature (T b) of free-flying bar-headed geese (Anser indicus), a species that completes a high-altitude trans-Himalayan migration through very cold, hypoxic environments. We measured abdominal T b, along with altitude (via changes in barometric pressure), heart rate and body acceleration of bar-headed geese during their migration across the Tibetan Plateau. Bar-headed geese vary the circadian rhythm of T b in response to migration, with peak daily T b during daytime hours outside of migration but early in the morning or overnight during migration, reflecting changes in body acceleration. However, during flight, changes in T b were not consistent with changes in flight performance (as measured by heart rate or rate of ascent) or altitude. Overall, our results suggest that bar-headed geese are able to thermoregulate during high-altitude migration, maintaining T b within a relatively narrow range despite appreciable variation in flight intensity and environmental conditions.
Keyphrases
  • heart rate
  • heart rate variability
  • blood pressure
  • climate change
  • air pollution
  • atrial fibrillation
  • high intensity
  • human health