On the intraspecific variability in basal metabolism and the food habits hypothesis in birds
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2010-04-20Metadata
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Bozinovic, Francisco
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On the intraspecific variability in basal metabolism and the food habits hypothesis in birds
Abstract
The food habits hypothesis (FHH) stands as one of the most striking and often-cited interspecific patterns to emerge
from comparative studies of endothermic energetics. The FHH identifies three components of diet that potentially produce variability
in mass-independent BMR, i.e. food quality, food availability, and food predictability or environmental productivity. The
hypothesis predicts that species with diets of low energy content and/or low digestibility should evolve low mass-independent
BMRs. The effects of food habits on BMR have been widely investigated at the interspecific level, but the variation between individuals
and populations has been largely ignored. Our focus is to compare predictions derived from interspecific studies with
data collected from within-species studies to explore the mechanisms and functional significance of adaptive responses predicted
by the food-habits hypothesis among birds. We conclude that if BMR is correlated with daily energy expenditure, then organisms
that can lower BMR will reduce daily energy expenditure and hence, food requirements. Birds that lower BMR in stressful environments
may increase survival. Nevertheless, the mechanism (s) by which birds eating a low quality diet reduce BMR and
whether lower BMR affects fitness remain to be determined
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Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Funded by FONDAP 1501-0001 to FB
and FONDECYT 1080077 to PS. David Swanson kindly invited us to submit this article.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119195
Quote Item
CURRENT ZOOLOGY, Volume: 56, Issue: 6, Pages: 759-766, 2010
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