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Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?

Climate change-induced increases in air temperature pose a substantial risk to birds inhabiting arid environments. Terrestrial endotherms, such as birds, can respond to high temperatures by moving to cooler microsites, increasing heat dissipation behaviour and/or suppressing activity. Previous studi...

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Main Author: Orolowitz, Matthew
Other Authors: Cunningham, Susan J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Orolowitz, Matthew
author2 Cunningham, Susan J
author_browse Cunningham, Susan J
Orolowitz, Matthew
author_facet Cunningham, Susan J
Orolowitz, Matthew
author_sort Orolowitz, Matthew
collection Thesis
description Climate change-induced increases in air temperature pose a substantial risk to birds inhabiting arid environments. Terrestrial endotherms, such as birds, can respond to high temperatures by moving to cooler microsites, increasing heat dissipation behaviour and/or suppressing activity. Previous studies have suggested that larger bird species may have a greater suppression of activity (e.g. foraging) than smaller species at high air temperatures. However, this body mass effect may be confounded by drinking behaviour, since different species have diverse drinking ecologies. Using four species of lark that inhabit the Tankwa Karoo National Park, I investigated whether foraging activity and other heat-influenced behaviours were influenced by body mass or drinking behaviour when comparisons were constrained within a single family. These lark species were: Red-capped Lark (24 g), Spikedheeled Lark (25 g), Karoo Lark (29 g) and Large-billed Lark (45 g). There was a two-fold difference in body mass between the lightest (Red-capped Lark) and the heaviest (Large-billed Lark). Moreover, two of these lark species drink surface water (drinking larks; Red-capped and Large-billed Lark) and two do not (non-drinking larks; Spike-heeled and Karoo Lark). I also collected data on other passerines present in the Tankwa Karoo for comparison to the larks. Black bulb thermometers were used to measure the thermal landscape and a combination of instantaneous scan samples and focal observations to record bird behaviour. Black bulb temperatures were as much as 8.16 °C cooler in shaded than in sunny locations. Similarly, black bulb temperatures were as much as 8.02 °C cooler off the ground than on the ground. The results from scan sample data showed limited support that foraging was negatively correlated (although non-significant) with mass between lark species as temperatures increased; however, data from focal observations suggested larks that obtain all water from food had a greater reduction in foraging as temperatures increase than larks that drink free surface water. Within scan samples, heat dissipation and shade-seeking behaviour appeared to be more strongly influenced by whether the species drinks free surface water or not than by differences in body mass. Furthermore, drinking larks dissipate heat at lower temperatures and seek shade at higher temperatures than non-drinking larks. Foraging intensity was higher in the sunny microsites as compared to shaded microsites for all species, suggesting that drinking larks might gain an energetic benefit due to increased heat tolerance. Therefore, non-drinking species may be vulnerable to foraging-thermoregulation trade-offs under climate change. However, ongoing drying trends in the Tankwa Karoo and reduced availability of surface water may make drinking species more vulnerable to climate change in the future than non-drinking species.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32497 Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert? Orolowitz, Matthew Cunningham, Susan J Ornithology Climate Change Climate change-induced increases in air temperature pose a substantial risk to birds inhabiting arid environments. Terrestrial endotherms, such as birds, can respond to high temperatures by moving to cooler microsites, increasing heat dissipation behaviour and/or suppressing activity. Previous studies have suggested that larger bird species may have a greater suppression of activity (e.g. foraging) than smaller species at high air temperatures. However, this body mass effect may be confounded by drinking behaviour, since different species have diverse drinking ecologies. Using four species of lark that inhabit the Tankwa Karoo National Park, I investigated whether foraging activity and other heat-influenced behaviours were influenced by body mass or drinking behaviour when comparisons were constrained within a single family. These lark species were: Red-capped Lark (24 g), Spikedheeled Lark (25 g), Karoo Lark (29 g) and Large-billed Lark (45 g). There was a two-fold difference in body mass between the lightest (Red-capped Lark) and the heaviest (Large-billed Lark). Moreover, two of these lark species drink surface water (drinking larks; Red-capped and Large-billed Lark) and two do not (non-drinking larks; Spike-heeled and Karoo Lark). I also collected data on other passerines present in the Tankwa Karoo for comparison to the larks. Black bulb thermometers were used to measure the thermal landscape and a combination of instantaneous scan samples and focal observations to record bird behaviour. Black bulb temperatures were as much as 8.16 °C cooler in shaded than in sunny locations. Similarly, black bulb temperatures were as much as 8.02 °C cooler off the ground than on the ground. The results from scan sample data showed limited support that foraging was negatively correlated (although non-significant) with mass between lark species as temperatures increased; however, data from focal observations suggested larks that obtain all water from food had a greater reduction in foraging as temperatures increase than larks that drink free surface water. Within scan samples, heat dissipation and shade-seeking behaviour appeared to be more strongly influenced by whether the species drinks free surface water or not than by differences in body mass. Furthermore, drinking larks dissipate heat at lower temperatures and seek shade at higher temperatures than non-drinking larks. Foraging intensity was higher in the sunny microsites as compared to shaded microsites for all species, suggesting that drinking larks might gain an energetic benefit due to increased heat tolerance. Therefore, non-drinking species may be vulnerable to foraging-thermoregulation trade-offs under climate change. However, ongoing drying trends in the Tankwa Karoo and reduced availability of surface water may make drinking species more vulnerable to climate change in the future than non-drinking species. 2020-12-31T13:43:50Z 2020-12-31T13:43:50Z 2020 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32497 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Ornithology
Climate Change
Orolowitz, Matthew
Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?
title_full Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?
title_fullStr Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?
title_full_unstemmed Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?
title_short Life on the edge: do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in South Africa's most extreme desert?
title_sort life on the edge do body size and drinking dependency influence how birds deal with the heat in south africa s most extreme desert
topic Ornithology
Climate Change
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32497
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