Extreme hyperthermia tolerance in the world’s most abundant wild bird

Author(s)
Freeman, M T
Czenze, Z J
Schoeman, K
McKechnie, A E
Publication Date
2020
Abstract
<p>The thermal tolerances of vertebrates are generally restricted to body temperatures below 45–47 °C, and avian and mammalian critical thermal maxima seldom exceed 46 °C. We investigated thermoregulation at high air temperatures in the red-billed quelea (<i>Quelea quelea</i>), an African passerine bird that occurs in flocks sometimes numbering millions of individuals. Our data reveal this species can increase its body temperature to extremely high levels: queleas exposed to air temperature > 45 °C increased body temperature to 48.0 ± 0.7 °C without any apparent ill-effect, with individual values as high as 49.1 °C. These values exceed known avian lethal limits, with tolerance of body temperature > 48 °C unprecedented among birds and mammals.</p>
Citation
Scientific Reports, v.10, p. 1-6
ISSN
2045-2322
Link
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International
Title
Extreme hyperthermia tolerance in the world’s most abundant wild bird
Type of document
Journal Article
Entity Type
Publication

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink
openpublished/ExtremeCzenze2020JournalArticle.pdf 1264.634 KB application/pdf Published version View document