ABSTRACT
Avian orders differ in their thermoregulatory capabilities and tolerance of high environmental temperatures. Evaporative heat loss, and the primary avenue whereby it occurs, differs amongst taxa. Although Australian parrots (Psittaciformes) have been impacted by mass mortality events associated with extreme weather events (heat waves), their thermoregulatory physiology has not been well characterized. We quantified the upper limits to thermoregulation under extremely hot conditions in two Australian parrots: the mulga parrot (Psephotellus varius; ∼55 g) and the galah (Eolophus roseicapilla; ∼265 g). At air temperatures (Ta) exceeding body temperature (Tb), both species showed increases in Tb to maximum values around 43–44°C, accompanied by rapid increases in resting metabolic rate above clearly defined upper critical limits of thermoneutrality and increases in evaporative water loss to levels equivalent to 700–1000% of baseline rates at thermoneutral Ta. Maximum cooling capacity, quantified as the fraction of metabolic heat production dissipated evaporatively, ranged from 1.71 to 1.79, consistent with the known range for parrots, similar to the corresponding range in passerines, and well below the corresponding ranges for columbids and caprimulgids. Heat tolerance limit (the maximum Ta tolerated) ranged from 44 to 55°C, similar to the range reported for passerines, but lower than that reported for columbids and caprimulgids. Our data suggest that heat tolerance in parrots is similar to that in passerines. We argue that understanding how thermoregulatory capacity and heat tolerance vary across avian orders is vital for predicting how climate change and the associated increase in frequency of extreme weather events may impact avian populations in the future.
INTRODUCTION
Arid environments dominate the Australian landscape, covering almost half of the continent's total land area (Fisher et al., 1972). These environments present significant physiological and life history challenges for organisms. High air temperatures combined with intense solar radiation and limited surface water mean that use of evaporative cooling to defend normothermic body temperatures (Tb) must be balanced against the risk of dehydration (Dawson, 1954; Dawson and Bartholomew, 1968; Dawson and Schmidt-Nielsen, 1964; Serventy, 1971). Birds living in subtropical deserts may need to defend a Tb setpoint 15°C or more below their operative temperature (Bakken, 1976; Williams and Tieleman, 2005; Wolf and Walsberg, 1996; Wolf et al., 2000). They accomplish this using a combination of evaporative heat loss assisted by associated behaviors such as panting and gular fluttering, avoiding heat loads by reducing activity and seeking cooler microclimates, and tolerating mild hyperthermia (Albright et al., 2017). Even at moderate environmental temperatures, the demands of thermoregulation may constrain multiple components contributing to fitness, including foraging and body condition (du Plessis et al., 2012), nestling provisioning and growth rates (Cunningham et al., 2013), and nest predation risk (Tieleman et al., 2008).
The potential impacts of anthropogenic climate change on the thermoregulatory demands of birds, and thus population persistence and biodiversity, is a question of considerable conservation interest (McKechnie et al., 2012; McKechnie and Wolf, 2010). Aside from the potential sub-lethal impacts on life history mentioned above, extreme heat events can cause large-scale mortality events in bird populations. Current climate models predict that heat waves will become longer, more frequent and more intense as global surface temperatures increase, and the deserts of Australia are expected to warm by >4°C by the end of this century (IPCC, 2011). Deaths of birds during extremely hot weather are not a new occurrence in Australia, having been reported as early as the late 18th century (reviewed by McKechnie et al., 2012); however, projected warming scenarios will result in higher frequency of these events (McKechnie and Wolf, 2010). More recent events have included the deaths of thousands of budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus) and zebra finches (Taenopygia guttata) at the Overlander Roadhouse ∼500 km north of Perth, Western Australia, during a 2009 heat wave that was associated with Ta>45°C for several consecutive days (McKechnie et al., 2012), and the deaths of hundreds of endangered Carnaby's black cockatoos (Calyptorhynchus latirostris) during a single-day 2010 heat wave in Western Australia with Ta exceeding 47°C (Saunders et al., 2011). Low (2011) cites other recent reports of bird mortality events in other areas of Australia, including deserts in southwestern Queensland. Populations of mammals have also experienced heat-related mortality events, with more than 30,000 flying foxes (Pteropus spp.) having perished in heatwaves since 1994 in colonies along the eastern coast of Australia (Welbergen et al., 2008). These reports make it clear that a better picture of how heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacity vary among and within avian taxa is vital for predicting how arid-zone avifauna will respond to a hotter and drier environment.
Parrots (order Psittaciformes) represent a major element in the avifauna of the vast arid interior of Australia, where these mostly diurnal birds cope with maximum summer air temperatures that may reach 47–52°C (Serventy, 1971). There is a long history of ecophysiological studies of metabolism and evaporative water loss in parrots, including a number of Australian species, but many of these studies were focused on thermoregulation at moderate Ta within and below the thermoneutral zone (Burton et al., 2008; Dawson, 1965; Macmillen and Baudinette, 1993; Williams et al., 1991; Zungu et al., 2013), or designed to measure these parameters during exercise (Tucker, 1968). There have been fewer studies of metabolism and evaporative water loss in parrots at high Ta (Dawson and Fisher, 1982; Greenwald et al., 1967; Weathers and Caccamise, 1975; Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976). These studies reveal that parrots respond to high Ta with the increases in evaporative water loss and metabolic rate typical of many birds, using panting and lingual flutter (analogous to gular flutter in other taxa) to augment rates of evaporative water loss (Dawson and Fisher, 1982; Greenwald et al., 1967; Weathers and Caccamise, 1975; Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976). However, it is not clear whether these studies elicited maximum heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacities in the study individuals used, or whether greater heat tolerance is possible under different experimental conditions. In Dawson and Fisher's (1982) study of galahs, for instance, the dewpoint of air in chambers varied between 14 and 18°C, potentially impeding evaporative heat loss from birds exposed to high Ta (Gerson et al., 2014; Lasiewski et al., 1966; Smith et al., 2017).
Here, we examined the thermoregulatory capacities of two species of desert-dwelling Australian parrots exposed to levels of heat stress typical of their natural habitats. We quantified heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacity using the same methods as those employed in a number of recent studies spanning several avian orders (McKechnie et al., 2017, 2016a,b; O'Connor et al., 2017; Smith et al., 2015, 2017; Talbot et al., 2017; Whitfield et al., 2015). We used heat-acclimatized, wild birds to ask: (1) what are the metabolic and evaporative water loss rates in these parrot species and how do they respond to increasing air temperatures and during extreme heat stress; (2) what is the maximum thermal gradient (Ta–Tb) that these species can maintain during heat exposure; (3) what is the magnitude of hyperthermic responses and what are the limits of heat tolerance in these parrot species; and (4) to what degree does panting enhance the efficiency of heat dissipation?
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study species and site
We measured heat tolerance and evaporative cooling capacity in two Australian parrot species: the mulga parrot [Psephotellus varius Clark 1910, Psittaculidae; mean±s.d. body mass (Mb)=54.6±4.4 g, n=17, 7 female, 10 male] and the galah [Eolophus roseicapilla (Vieillot 1817), Cacatuidae; Mb=266.3±30.2 g, n=7, sex not determined].
The study took place at BirdLife Australia's Gluepot Reserve, South Australia (33°46′S, 140°07′E), between 30 January and 16 March 2014. Birds were captured using mist nets and were initially held in cloth bags before being transported to a field laboratory. All birds used in the study were adults and appeared to be in good condition. Sample sizes used depended on the number of birds captured. No individuals showing evidence of a brood patch were used. Measurements took place on the same day as each individual was captured. Birds were held in cages constructed of shade cloth with water available ad libitum. Birds were always offered water before and after experimental measurements, and a feeding tube attached to a syringe was used to introduce 1–10 ml of water directly into the crop if the birds did not drink while in cages (administered to one mulga parrot before measurements, and four mulga parrots and one galah after measurements). Measurements typically lasted 2–3 h, resulting in Mb loss (expressed as a percentage of initial Mb at the start of measurements) of 2.9±2.4% in mulga parrots and 6.3±1.1% in galahs. Time in captivity did not exceed 24 h, after which birds were released at the site of capture.
Habitats at Gluepot Reserve consist of summer, red and yorrell mallee scrub and black oak woodland. The climate is hot and arid, with a mean annual precipitation of 276±96 mm. Maximum Ta during January (the hottest month) averages 33.8±5.7°C, and maximum Ta exceeds 40°C on 12.9±5.2 days year−1 (weather records for 2000–2016 obtained from Bureau of Meteorology, www.bom.gov.au).
All experimental procedures were approved by the Animal Ethics Committees of the University of Adelaide (S-2013-151A) and the University of Pretoria (EC054-16), and the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of New Mexico (12-1005370-MCC). Birds were captured under a permit issued by the Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources of South Australia (E26141-2), and work on the Gluepot Reserve was done with permission from BirdLife Australia.
Measurements of metabolism, evaporative water loss and body temperature
Rates of CO2 production (V̇CO2) and evaporative water loss (EWL) were determined using a flow-through respirometry system. The respirometry chamber was a transparent plastic container (5 liters with maximal external dimensions of approximately 22×25×12 cm) modified by the addition of ports for incurrent and excurrent air flow and a thermocouple. The bird rested on a plastic mesh platform 5 cm above a 2 cm layer of medium weight mineral oil, an arrangement that trapped excreta and prevented oiling of feather surfaces. The chamber was housed in an insulated ice chest in which air temperature was controlled to within ±0.5°C with a Peltier unit (AC-162 Peltier-Thermoelectric Air Cooler and TC-36-25-rs232 controller, TE Technology, Traverse City, MI, USA). Dry air was produced by pushing compressed air through a membrane air dryer (Champion® CMD3 air dryer and filter, Champion Pneumatic, Quincy, IL, USA) or a calcium sulfate desiccant column (W. A. Hammond Drierite Co., Xenia, OH, USA). The dry air stream pushed into the respirometry chamber was regulated using mass flow controllers [50 or 100 SLPM (standard liters per minute) range] with an accuracy of ±0.8% of the reading ±0.2% of the full scale (Alicat Scientific Inc., Tucson, AZ, USA). Mean flow rate at which samples were obtained was 25.8±13.5 SLPM, but ranged from 10 to 65 SLPM. Sub-samples of incurrent and excurrent air were directed through a CO2/H2O analyzer (model LI-840A, LICOR, Lincoln, NE, USA) calibrated as described in Whitfield et al. (2015). Prior to placement in the chamber, each bird was hooded and briefly restrained (approximately 20 s) while a temperature-sensitive passive integrated transponder (PIT) tag (model TX1411BBT, Biomark, Boise, ID, USA) was injected into the abdominal cavity through an antiseptically prepared skin site (McKechnie et al., 2017, 2016b; Smith et al., 2015, 2017; Talbot et al., 2017). A droplet of cyanoacrylate adhesive closed the needle puncture site and the bird was released bearing the tag. The technique involving brief restraint was deemed less stressful to the bird than employing anesthesia. Body mass was measured to ±0.1 g (scale model V31XH2, Ohaus, Parsippany, NJ, USA). An infrared light and video camera allowed continuous observation of the subject bird in the darkened ice chest. A bird was considered to have tolerated this intervention well if it demonstrated escape attempts while being placed into the chamber, engaged in exploration of the chamber, then settled into quiet, but alert posture with eyes open and only shifted position slightly or moved the head to look about the chamber. Core body temperature (Tb) was recorded every 10 s from a transceiver (Biomark FS2001, Boise, ID, USA), placed within the ice chest, that interrogated the PIT tag. Chamber temperature (Ta) was continuously monitored with a type T thermocouple (TC-2000 thermocouple reader, Sable Systems International, Las Vegas, NV, USA). Respirometry chamber CO2 and humidity values were recorded once each second via an A-D converter (UI-2, Sable Systems International) and data were captured on a laptop computer using Expedata (version 1.4.15, Sable Systems International).
During each trial the bird was exposed initially to a Ta (30–35°C) approximating thermoneutrality as defined in earlier studies (Dawson and Fisher, 1982; Weathers and Caccamise, 1975; Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976; Williams et al., 1991). When the bird was calm, as indicated by CO2/H2O values that had reached a nadir and Tb and Ta were stable for approximately 10 min, the bird was then exposed to higher Ta from 40°C or higher upward in 2°C increments over a period of 1–3 h. Dry air flow rate was adjusted to maintain chamber water vapor values <5.0 ppt (dew point <−5°C) to avoid impairing evaporative water loss because of increased chamber humidity (Lasiewski et al., 1966) and help to keep the bird calm. Flow rates of up to 65 SLPM were required to maintain acceptable water vapor pressure levels as the birds increased evaporation with rising Ta. Calculation of metabolic rate from CO2 production rather than O2 utilization is more reliable with higher flow rates. The data used for analysis were taken after 5–10 min of stable Tb at a stable Ta and from birds at rest showing no evidence of flight attempts or escape behavior at the time. A trial was terminated if the bird demonstrated continuous active escape behavior or evidence of neurological impairment by loss of balance or righting reflex. Trials were also terminated if a heat tolerance limit (HTL) was reached, which we defined as a Tb approaching 45°C, close to the lethal limits of ∼46°C (Lutterschmidt and Hutchison, 1997), or if this Tb was approached at a rate of Tb increase greater than 0.1°C min−1 (McKechnie et al., 2017, 2016b; Smith et al., 2015, 2017; Talbot et al., 2017). The bird was then removed from the chamber, cooled, given additional water by gavage, and observed for thermoneutral Tb and normal behavior before release. No mortality occurred during the course of these experiments. During measurements, the behavior of birds while in the chamber was scored on a scale from 0 to 5, where 0 corresponded to a completely calm individual sitting immobile and 5 corresponded to a highly agitated bird exhibiting sustained escape behavior. Data analyses were restricted to data corresponding to an activity score of 0–3.
Calculations and statistical analysis
In order to ensure comparability among studies, we analyzed our data in the same way as in our other recent studies (McKechnie et al., 2017, 2016b; Smith et al., 2015; Whitfield et al., 2015). V̇CO2 was calculated using eqn 10.5 from Lighton (2008). Metabolic heat production (MHP; W) was calculated as in Walsberg and Wolf (1995) assuming a respiratory exchange ratio (RER) of 0.71. MHP as so calculated is herein also referred to as the resting metabolic rate (RMR). Rates of EWL were calculated using eqn 10.9 from Lighton (2008) assuming 0.803 mg H2O ml−1 of water vapor. The calculation for evaporative heat loss was based on 2.406 J mg−1 H2O. We used broken-stick linear regression models fitted in the R package segmented (Muggeo, 2008) to identify inflection points for the relationships between EWL, RMR, the ratio of evaporative heat loss to metabolic heat production (EHL/MHP) and Tb as a function of Ta. We then fitted linear mixed-effects models that included individual identity as a random factor in the R package nlme (Pinheiro et al., 2018). R (v3.4.0) was run inside RStudio (v1.0.143). Changes in evaporative heat loss variables before and after the onset of panting were assessed using repeated-measures ANOVA in SPSS (v24.0.0.0). Values for variables are given as means±s.d. and values for slopes are given with 95% confidence intervals.
RESULTS
Body temperature and thermal endpoints
From the lowest test Ta (∼30°C), Tb increased significantly to the HTL (Table 1, Fig. 1). Above the inflection point (Ta=35.3°C in mulga parrots and 41.4°C in galahs), the rates of increase in Tb approximately doubled in mulga parrots and increased by 1.7-fold in galahs (Table 1). In galahs there was a second inflection point apparent at Ta=51.9°C, above which the rate of increase in Tb increased by threefold relative to the rate between the inflection points. In mulga parrots there was no second inflection point evident. Breadth of the regression line confidence limits ranged between 0.05 and 0.3°C °C−1 (Table 1). At the HTL, an average Tb of 43.4±0.6°C in mulga parrots and 44.1±0.3°C in galahs was maintained with stable RMR and EWL values for at least 10 min. In mulga parrots, the HTL was reached in two individuals at Ta=44°C, one individual at Ta=48°C and one individual at Ta=49°C. In galahs, the HTL was reached in one individual at Ta=53°C, five individuals at Ta=54°C and one individual at Ta=55°C.
Resting metabolic rate
Minimum RMR values averaged 0.65±0.10 W at Ta=35°C in mulga parrots and 2.07±0.41 W at Ta=30°C in galahs and increased significantly with increasing Ta (Table 1, Fig. 2). Segmented regressions indicated inflection points at Ta=40.8°C in mulga parrots and at Ta=40.2°C in galahs, which represent the upper critical temperatures (Tuc) for each species. RMR as a function of Ta increased above the Tuc from near zero to 0.05 W °C−1 in mulga parrots and from 0.02 to 0.07 W °C−1 in galahs, an increase of ∼3.5-fold (Table 1, Fig. 2). In galahs there was a second inflection point apparent at Ta=50.7°C, above which the rate of increase in RMR was 0.37 W °C−1, an increase of ∼5.3-fold relative to the rate between the inflection points. In mulga parrots there was no second inflection point apparent. Breadth of regression line confidence intervals ranged between 0.01 and 0.30 W °C−1 (Table 1). Maximum average RMR values coincided with the HTL in both species and were 1.38±0.12 W in mulga parrots and 4.40±0.60 W in galahs, approximately double the minimum RMR values.
Evaporative water loss
Minimum EWL values occurred at the lowest test Ta (∼30°C) in both species (0.37±0.21 g h−1 in mulga parrots and 1.15±0.32 g h−1 in galahs) and increased significantly with increasing Ta (Table 1, Fig. 3). Above single inflection points, which were at Ta=40.2°C in mulga parrots and at Ta=41.3°C in galahs, the rate of EWL increase with Ta increased approximately fivefold to 0.23 g h−1 °C−1 in mulga parrots and 0.66 g h−1 °C−1 in galahs (Table 1). Breadth of the regression line confidence intervals ranged from 0.01 to 0.09 g h−1 °C−1. Maximum EWL occurred at each species' HTL and were equivalent to approximately sevenfold minimum values in mulga parrots and 10-fold minimum values in galahs. Average maximum EWL values were 2.66±0.07 g h−1 in mulga parrots and 11.64±1.36 g h−1 in galahs.
Panting and evaporative heat dissipation
Minimum EHL/MHP values occurred at the lowest test Ta (∼30°C) in both species (0.35±0.12 in mulga parrots and 0.37±0.03 in galahs) and increased significantly with increasing Ta (Table 2, Fig. 4). In mulga parrots there was a single inflection point at Ta=37.8°C, above which the slope of the relationship of EHL/MHP with Ta increased approximately 10-fold to 0.10°C−1. In galahs there were two inflection points apparent: above the first, the slope of the relationship of EHL/MHP with Ta increased 5.5-fold to 0.11°C−1; above the second, the slope decreased by 3.7-fold relative to the slope between the inflection points, to 0.03°C−1. Breadth of the regression line confidence intervals ranged from 0.01 to 0.25°C−1. At the highest Ta in mulga parrots, which also corresponded to this species' HTL, EHL/MHP was ∼24% lower that it was at its maximum at Ta=46°C (1.71±0.18; Table 2). Maximum EHL/MHP in galahs occurred at this species' HTL of Ta=54°C and was 1.79±0.27. Maximum EHL/MHP was ∼5-fold higher than minimum in both species. It should be noted, however, that these values are based on the assumption that RER=0.71, i.e. the metabolic substrate during gas exchange measurements consisted entirely of lipids. If this assumption is incorrect, the actual EHL/MHP values could be higher, ranging from 2.16 in mulga parrots to 2.45 in galahs if the metabolic substrate consisted solely of carbohydrates (i.e. RER=1.00; see dashed lines in Fig. 4).
In some cases the onset of panting coincided with an increasing Ta as the chamber temperature was adjusted to the next test Ta; however, in 10 individual mulga parrots and four individual galahs we were able to observe the onset of panting during a period of stable Ta. Thus, we have a record of the changes in RMR, EHL and EHL/MHP that occurred abruptly as panting commenced (Table 2, Fig. 5). The onset of panting occurred at Ta=40.9±1.1°C in mulga parrots and Ta=42.7±2.5°C in galahs. RMR did not increase significantly at the onset of panting in either species (F1,9=3.27, P=0.104 and F1,3=1.15, P=0.362 for mulga parrots and galahs, respectively), but increased linearly thereafter. EHL increased significantly at the onset of panting in both species (F1,9=85.61, P<0.001 and F1,3=26.44, P=0.014 for mulga parrots and galahs, respectively), approximately doubling. The proportion of metabolic heat dissipated by evaporation (EHL/MHP) increased significantly in both species (F1,19=41.72, P<0.001 and F1,3=116.52, P=0.002 for mulga parrots and galahs, respectively), increasing by 1.6-fold in mulga parrots and 1.8-fold in galahs (Table 2).
DISCUSSION
Both species of parrots in the present study showed patterns of thermoregulation at high Ta broadly similar to those of other parrots, including previous measurements in galahs (Dawson and Fisher, 1982), with Tb increasing from normothermic values of ∼40°C to maxima around 43–44°C. The regulation of Tb below Ta was achieved via large increases in rates of evaporative heat dissipation, with EWL increasing to 700–1000% of resting values at thermoneutral Ta. Both species showed clearly defined upper critical limits of thermoneutrality. At the highest Ta values in galahs, cooling mechanisms could not compensate for rapid increases in Tb, leading to a plateau in evaporative heat dissipation that corresponded with the HTL of this species.
Body temperature and heat tolerance limits
The normothermic Tb of the two species investigated here (∼40°C) increased to maximum Tb values around 43–44°C at HTLs. The Ta inflection points above which Tb began to increase rapidly in the present study were in the same range as those reported for five species of passerines measured at the same study site (McKechnie et al., 2017). In galahs, a second Ta inflection occurred at Ta=51.9°C, above which the rate of Tb change increased by an additional ∼3-fold and most birds reached their thermal endpoints (i.e. HTL), suggesting a failure of thermoregulatory mechanisms. In contrast, Dawson and Fisher (1982) reported a single Tb inflection point for the same species at Ta ∼34°C for summer-acclimatized birds based on cloacal temperatures (2-cm insertion) upon removal from metabolic chambers, although maximum Ta values were lower than in the present study.
Maximum Tb values associated with acute heat stress in the two parrot species in the present study were comparable to previously reported values in other taxa. Dawson and Fisher (1982) reported maximum Tb of 43–44.2°C in galahs held at Ta=47–48°C for 6–8 h; these birds were held at lower Ta values for much longer periods compared with the present study, but exhibited similar maximum Tb values. Maximum Tb values recorded in the present study were within the same range as those recently reported for southern African passerines (Whitfield et al., 2015), columbids from southern Africa and North America (McKechnie et al., 2016b; Smith et al., 2015) and a southern African sandgrouse (McKechnie et al., 2016a), with all these studies involving the same methods as we used here. The present study therefore confirms that the approximate upper Tb limit to physiological function in psittaciform birds under acute heat exposure conditions is similar to that in most avian taxa. As discussed by McKechnie et al. (2017), the fact that these values are slightly more conservative than some reported in the earlier literature may reflect the fact that we actively avoided exposing birds to lethal Tb.
The range of HTL for parrot species in the present study (Ta=44–55°C) is similar to the range reported for passerines (46–54°C; McKechnie et al., 2017; Whitfield et al., 2015), both of which are lower than the ranges reported for caprimulgids (52–62°C; O'Connor et al., 2017; Talbot et al., 2017) and columbids (56–62°C; McKechnie et al., 2016b). At their HTL, mulga parrots maintained Tb ∼4.6°C below Ta and galahs maintained Tb ∼9.9°C below Ta; comparable data are not available for other parrot species. Passerines show a similar positive correlation of Ta–Tb values with Mb at HTL, ranging from ∼1–3°C at Mb=10–15 g to ∼6°C at Mb=117 g (McKechnie et al., 2017; Whitfield et al., 2015). In columbiforms, Ta–Tb values at HTL are generally higher, ranging from ∼11°C at Mb=37 g to ∼14°C at Mb=186 g (McKechnie et al., 2016b), and in caprimulgiforms values are higher still, ranging from ∼8 to ∼19°C in species with Mb=44 to 50 g (Talbot et al., 2017).
Resting metabolic rate
Both species showed a clear Tuc above which RMR increased linearly, occurring at Ta ∼40°C and closely matching Ta at the onset of panting. This close link between the onset of panting and increases in RMR above thermoneutral values is consistent with recent data for Burchell's sandgrouse (Pterocles burchelli) (McKechnie et al., 2016a), but contrasts with data for five passerines at Gluepot Reserve, in which there was no clear relationship between the Tuc and the onset of panting (McKechnie et al., 2017). Previously reported Tuc values for monk parakeets (38.5°C; Weathers and Caccamise, 1975) and budgerigars (41°C; Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976) were very similar to the Tuc values observed for the two species in the present study. In galahs we observed a second inflection point in the relationship between RMR and Ta at 50.7°C, which closely matches the second inflection point observed in the Tb data (51.9°C), presumably because birds were attempting to counter rapid increases in Tb.
The fractional increases in RMR observed in this study between thermoneutral and maximum values were ∼2-fold in both mulga parrots and galahs. Taking all available psittaciform data into account (four species), the mean ratio of RMR at Ta=48°C compared with Ta=35°C is 1.77±0.28 (present study, Dawson and Fisher, 1982; Weathers and Caccamise, 1975; Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976) compared with 1.38±0.22 in seven species of passerines (McKechnie et al., 2017; Tieleman et al., 2002; Whitfield et al., 2015; Wolf and Walsberg, 1996) and 1.07±0.09 in seven species of columbids (Hoffman and Walsberg, 1999; McKechnie et al., 2016b; McKechnie and Wolf, 2004; Withers and Williams, 1990). The relatively larger fractional changes in RMR at high Ta in passerines and in the four species of psittaciform birds studied to date likely reflect the metabolic cost of muscle contractions involved in panting or gular fluttering (Dawson, 1982; Richards, 1970) to increase respiratory evaporative water loss (REWL), whereas the smaller increases in columbiform birds seem to be functionally linked to less energetically demanding cutaneous evaporative water loss in those taxa (McKechnie et al., 2016b).
Evaporative water loss
In both mulga parrots and galahs, EWL increased gradually with increasing Ta at moderate values, and then increased rapidly and linearly above Ta=∼40°C, again corresponding very closely to the temperature at onset of panting. Dawson and Fisher (1982) found an identical pattern in their earlier study on the galah; however, their inflection temperature at which EWL began to increase rapidly was lower at Ta ∼32.5°C, possibly reflecting the higher chamber humidities in the latter study compared with ours, and/or different acclimation/acclimatization histories. Weathers and Caccamise (1975) and Weathers and Schoenbaechler (1976) reported similar patterns in monk parakeets and budgerigars, respectively. The inflection Ta for EWL appears to be at ∼36°C in the monk parakeet (Weathers and Caccamise, 1975) and at ∼39°C in the budgerigar (Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976). Greenwald et al. (1967) described a similar pattern of EWL with Ta in the budgerigar, with an inflection point at ∼34°C.
Maximum EWL rates in the present study were ∼7-fold higher than minimum EWL rates in mulga parrots, and ∼10-fold higher in galahs. Dawson and Fisher (1982) reported a 40-fold increase in EWL in summer-acclimatized galahs between Ta of 20 and 48°C. Extrapolating their data to EWL at Ta=30°C (the minimum Ta used in the present study, at which minimum EWL occurred for galahs) provides an estimate of ∼0.42 g h−1, which is ∼2.8-fold lower than that of birds measured in the present study. This equates to a ∼14.5-fold increase in EWL between Ta=30°C and their maximum measurement Ta=48°C. This maximum Ta is lower than that in the present study, and the proportional increase in EWL higher, although the galahs in that study were exposed to this temperature for several hours, losing ∼10% of starting Mb and ∼15% of body water. By way of comparison, birds in the present study lost between 3% and 6% of starting Mb. Weathers and Schoenbaechler (1976) reported that maximum EWL in budgerigars was 16-fold higher at Ta=45°C relative to thermoneutral Ta. Similarly, Weathers and Caccamise (1975) reported that maximum EWL in monk parakeets increased by 12-fold between thermoneutral Ta and Ta=46°C. On balance, these findings suggest that parrots have a high capacity to increase EWL.
Panting and evaporative heat dissipation
The metabolic cost of cooling in galah began to rise rapidly above a Ta inflection point of ∼50°C in order to counter a rapid increase in Tb. Because EWL continued increasing at the same rate, evaporative heat dissipation (EHL/MHP) appears to plateau above Ta∼48°C. Galahs above Ta∼50°C were reaching their HTL, suggesting that cooling mechanisms were beginning to fail. Maximum EHL/MHP in galahs was 1.79, assuming RER=0.71 (lipid catabolism) in post-absorptive birds. Dawson and Fisher (1982) reported EHL/MHP values of 1.4–1.7 in galahs exposed to Ta∼48°C. Weathers and Caccamise (1975) reported EHL/MHP values of 1.53 for monk parakeets exposed to Ta=44°C, and Weathers and Schoenbaechler (1976) reported EHL/MHP values of 1.56 for budgerigars exposed to Ta=45°C. These latter two studies were not designed to test HTLs, so it is not clear whether these are maximum EHL/MHP values for these species. Passerines in general appear to have maximum cooling efficiencies similar to those of the parrot species in the present study, equivalent to EHL/MHP<2.0 even in larger species (Marder, 1973; McKechnie et al., 2017; Whitfield et al., 2015).
The metabolic cost of cooling (RMR) increased linearly after Tuc and the onset of panting in both species in the present study. Evaporative heat loss increased significantly at the onset of panting, approximately doubling, in both species. EHL/MHP increased significantly in both species (1.6-fold in mulga parrots and 1.8-fold in galahs). Dawson and Fisher (1982) reported extensive panting by galahs exposed to high Ta, describing vigorous thoracic movements and also pumping of the fleshy tongue (coincident with breathing movements) that appeared to foster increased movement of the gular area. These authors also reported galahs at high Ta using wing drooping, where the wings are held away from the body surface to augment convective heat loss. Weathers and Caccamise (1975) reported open-mouthed panting including tongue movements in monk parakeets at high Ta, referring to these latter movements as ‘lingual flutter’, and Weathers and Schoenbaechler (1976) similarly reported panting and tongue movements synchronized with thoracic movements in budgerigars. We did not record observations of tongue movements in the present study, but it may be a common strategy in parrots to increased movement of the gular area and thus increase EWL rate.
Conclusions
Our data on thermoregulation at environmental temperatures above Tb in two Australian parrot species suggest that evaporative cooling in Psittaciformes is generally less efficient than in orders such as Columbiformes and Caprimulgiformes, but similar to that in Passeriformes. Increases in EWL, RMR and Tb with increasing Ta in the parrot species in the present study were similar to increases in five species of Australian passerines studied at the same Gluepot Reserve field site (McKechnie et al., 2017). Maximum heat dissipation capacity measured as maximum EHL/MHP in parrots ranges from 1.5 to 1.8 (present study; Dawson and Fisher, 1982; Weathers and Caccamise, 1975; Weathers and Schoenbaechler, 1976), which is comparable to the range in passerines of 1.2–2.2 (McKechnie et al., 2017; Whitfield et al., 2015), and lower than the range in columbids of 2.3–4.7 (McKechnie et al., 2016b; Smith et al., 2015) and in caprimulgids of 3.0–5.2 (Dawson and Fisher, 1969; O'Connor et al., 2017; Talbot et al., 2017). It is likely that this variation in evaporative cooling efficiency arises from variation amongst orders in the primary avenues of heat dissipation. Columbids appear to use cutaneous evaporative water loss extensively (reviewed by McKechnie et al., 2016b; McKechnie and Wolf, 2004), whereas passerines rely primarily on respiratory evaporative water loss augmented by panting (McKechnie et al., 2017; Wolf and Walsberg, 1996). Caprimulgids also rely on respiratory evaporative water loss, using a comparatively massive buccal surface area to maximize evaporation (Talbot et al., 2017). Data from the present study and other studies of parrot species thermoregulating at high Ta show the importance of panting (and potentially lingual flutter augmented by tongue movements coincident with breathing) for maximizing EWL in psittaciform birds; presently it is not known the extent to which parrots are able to rely on cutaneous evaporative water loss.
These taxonomic differences in evaporative heat dissipation and HTL are reflected in differences in behavior and microsite selection in both wild and captive birds. At Gluepot Reserve, wild Australian ring-necked parrots (Barnardius zonarius) were observed on very hot days (Ta≥44°C) to sit in deep shade under trees, wing venting and pressing their bellies to the soil to lose heat (W.A.T., personal observation). Captive parrots spend more time resting and retire to shaded microsites on extremely hot summer days, whereas doves may increase activity and feeding behavior during the hottest periods, often doing so in full solar exposure (Xie et al., 2017). Fisher et al. (1972) reported observations of wild Australian arid-zone birds and found that drinking patterns differed greatly amongst orders at high Ta, with parrots visiting water points only in the early morning and at sunset, and doves continuing to visit water points throughout the day. The potential links between avian heat tolerance physiology and drinking behavior patterns remain unexplored. One prediction, for instance, is that at unshaded waterholes exposed to intense solar radiation, the very high operative temperatures small birds experience at midday may favor drinking at cooler times of the day in taxa that lack highly efficient evaporative cooling pathways.
Parrots are widespread in the arid interior of Australia and have featured conspicuously in reports of large-scale mortality events associated with heat waves (reviewed by McKechnie et al., 2012). These events have recently impacted a threatened parrot species, the Carnaby's black cockatoo (Saunders et al., 2011), and are likely to occur much more frequently in the coming decades than they have in the past (McKechnie and Wolf, 2010). Our results, along with those of the few other studies of thermoregulation in parrots exposed to high Ta, indicate that they may be more vulnerable than taxa such as Columbiformes and Caprimulgiformes to extreme weather events. However, additional data are needed across a broad range of parrot families and body sizes to effectively model the heat tolerance and hydration status of free-ranging birds in natural habitats, which is vital for predicting how climate change and extreme weather events may impact parrot populations in the future.
Acknowledgements
We thank BirdLife Australia for allowing us to conduct this research on their property. The Gluepot Reserve management committee, particularly chair Duncan MacKenzie and volunteer rangers Tim and Shirley Pascoe, are thanked for their assistance and advice. Michael Griego and Matt Baumann ably assisted with fieldwork and metabolic measurements. The critical comments of two anonymous peer reviewers assisted us in improving the manuscript.
Footnotes
Author contributions
Conceptualization: A.E.M., B.O.W.; Methodology: A.E.M., B.O.W.; Formal analysis: T.J.M.; Investigation: T.J.M., A.R.G., W.A.T., E.K.S.; Writing - original draft: T.J.M.; Writing - review & editing: T.J.M., A.R.G., W.A.T., E.K.S., A.E.M., B.O.W.
Funding
This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation (IOS-1122228 to B.O.W.). Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
References
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing or financial interests.