Female but not male zebra finches adjust heat output in response to increased incubation demand

The Journal of Experimental Biology
Davina L HillRuedi G Nager

Abstract

In many incubating birds, heat transfer from parent to egg is facilitated by the brood patch, an area of ventral abdominal skin that becomes highly vascularised, swells and loses its down feathers around the time of laying. Only the female develops a brood patch in most passerine species, but males of some species can incubate and maintain the eggs at similar temperatures to females even without a brood patch. Here we used a novel application of infrared thermography to examine sex differences in parental care from a physiological perspective. Using incubating male and female zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), a species in which the male lacks a brood patch, we measured the surface temperature of the ventral plumage overlying the abdomen and a reference area that does not contact the eggs (thorax) twice per pair. In half of the pairs, clutch size was experimentally enlarged between the two sets of measurements to increase incubation demand. We found that the temperature differential between abdomen and thorax plumage was greater in females than in males, and that abdomen plumage was warmer after clutch enlargement than before in females but not in males. These findings are consistent with morphological sex differences in broo...Continue Reading

References

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Apr 20, 2006·Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and Neonatal Nursing : JOGNN·Susan M Ludington-HoeStacey Reese
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Citations

Jan 25, 2020·The Journal of Experimental Biology·Joshua K RobertsonGary Burness

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