Mengsi Wu, Yuchao Xiao, Fang Yang, Limeng Zhou, Weihong Zheng, Jinsong Liu. 2014: Seasonal variation in body mass and energy budget in Chinese bulbuls(pycnonotus sinensis). Avian Research, 5(1): 4. DOI: 10.1186/s40657-014-0004-8
Citation: Mengsi Wu, Yuchao Xiao, Fang Yang, Limeng Zhou, Weihong Zheng, Jinsong Liu. 2014: Seasonal variation in body mass and energy budget in Chinese bulbuls(pycnonotus sinensis). Avian Research, 5(1): 4. DOI: 10.1186/s40657-014-0004-8

Seasonal variation in body mass and energy budget in Chinese bulbuls(pycnonotus sinensis)

More Information
  • Corresponding author:

    Jinsong Liu, ljs@wzu.edu.cn

  • Received Date: 31 Jul 2018
  • Accepted Date: 05 Aug 2014
  • Available Online: 24 Apr 2022
  • Publish Date: 22 Sep 2018
  • Background 

    Seasonal adjustments in body mass and energy budget are important for the survival of small birds in temperate zones. Seasonal changes in body mass, body temperature, gross energy intake (GEI), digestible energy intake (DEI), body fat content, as well as length and mass of the digestive tract, were measured in Chinese Bulbuls (Pycnonotus sinensis) caught in the wild at Wenzhou, China.

    Methods 

    Body mass was determined with a Sartorius balance. The caloric contents of the dried food and feces were then determined using a oxygen bomb calorimeter. Total fat was extracted from the dried carcasses by ether extraction in a Soxhlet apparatus. The digestive tract of each bird was measured and weighed, and was then dried to a constant mass.

    Results 

    Body mass showed a significant seasonal variation and was higher in spring and winter than in summer and autumn. Body fat was higher in winter than in other seasons. GEI and DEI were significantly higher in winter. The length and mass of the digestive tract were greatest in winter and the magnitude of both these parameters was positively correlated with body mass, GEI and DEI. Small passerines typically have higher daily energy expenditure in winter, necessitating increased food consumption.

    Conclusions 

    This general observation is consistent with the observed winter increase in gut volume and body mass in Chinese Bulbuls. These results suggest that Chinese Bulbuls adjust to winter conditions by increasing their body mass, body fat, GEI, DEI and digestive tract size.

  • As divergence in allopatry between two species increases, levels of postzygotic isolation are also likely to increase (Coyne and Orr 1997). Extrinsic sources of postzygotic isolation, when hybrids are ecologically or biologically unfit, are thought to play an important role in the early stages of population divergence, while intrinsic genetic incompatibilities causing hybrid sterility and/or inviability are thought to develop later (Presgraves 2010; Seehausen et al. 2014). However, little is known about postzygotic isolation between pairs of species for which past hybridization has generated a new species that is reproductively isolated from both parents (a process called hybrid speciation; Mallet 2007). Such information is critical if we want to understand which isolating mechanisms may constrain or facilitate hybrid speciation (Abbott et al. 2013; Schumer et al. 2014). It has been hypothesized that postzygotic barriers may hinder the hybrid speciation process as they will, by necessity, involve the purging of genetic incompatibilities in early generation hybrids (Nolte and Tautz 2010). However, if instead these incompatibilities can be sorted in such a way that one subset of the genes function as reproductive barriers against one of the parents and a different subset against the other parent (Trier et al. 2014), they may favor the emergence of a fully isolated new hybrid lineage (Hermansen et al. 2014; Trier et al. 2014).

    The house sparrow (Passer domesticus) and Spanish sparrow (P. hispaniolensis) are two closely related, ecologically similar passerine species. However, differences in habitat and timing of breeding appear to represent pre-mating barriers to gene exchange (Summers-Smith 1988; Hanh Tu 2013). In contrast, there is currently no evidence for post-mating prezygotic isolation (Cramer et al. 2014). Past episodes of hybridization between house sparrows and Spanish sparrows have resulted in the formation of a homoploid hybrid species, the Italian sparrow (P. italiae) (Elgvin et al. 2011; Hermansen et al. 2011). Further, the two parent species are still sympatric in many parts of their range and occasionally hybridize (Summers-Smith 1988; Hermansen et al. 2014). There is also molecular evidence that these two species are isolated by Z-linked genetic incompatibilities (Hermansen et al. 2014). However, little is known about the biological consequences of these genetic incompatibilities and whether they are of an extrinsic and/or intrinsic nature.

    Haldane's rule predicts that the heterogametic sex should suffer more from genetic incompatibilities (Haldane 1922). In birds, the female is the heterogametic sex (ZW) and is hence predicted to suffer more from intrinsic incompatibilities than male hybrids. Here, we investigate whether hybrid females between house sparrows and Spanish sparrows exhibit reduced fertility (through ovarian hypofunction indicated by ovarian atrophy and/or complete lack of follicular development) by dissecting and measuring the ovaries from experimental interspecific crosses between these species.

    We used captive populations of the two species to form experimental crosses in a common garden environment. We captured house sparrows in Oslo, Norway (59.934°N, 10.723°E), and Spanish sparrows in Badajoz, Spain (38.649°N, 7.215°W); most birds were captured in 2010, and breeding activity was monitored the following years. Sparrows were maintained in mixed-sex aviaries housing 15-18 pairs of birds. Although there is no known information about the pedigrees of these different aviaries for logistic reasons, inter and intraspecific crosses were controlled through the following design: two aviaries contained males and females from a single species, while two other aviaries contained males from one species and females from the other species. Hence, hybrids sired from both types of parental combinations, as well as pure house and Spanish sparrows, were generated in a controlled fashion.

    The birds were fed ad libitum with seeds and dried insects, and were supplemented with mealworms during the breeding season. We provided nest boxes and nesting material and allowed the birds to breed and pair without interference. A number of birds in all four aviaries bred successfully, and eggs were laid between April and September each year. During the breeding season (May) of 2014, on the same day, we sacrificed 6 hybrid females (5 fathered by a house sparrow male and Spanish sparrow female and 1 fathered by a Spanish sparrow male and house sparrow female) and 12 pure species females (8 house and 4 Spanish sparrows) and inspected their reproductive organs. All birds were mature adults (i.e. at least 2 or more years of age, either wild caught or aviary-born) and had been maintained in captivity under identical conditions for at least two years prior to the current experiment.

    Prior to dissection, we measured tarsus length and beak height with a caliper to the nearest 0.1 mm, wing length with a ruler to the nearest 0.5 mm, and body mass with a Pesola balance to the nearest 0.1 g. Ovaries from a total of 18 adult females were scored as either normally developed or atrophied (the main symptom of ovarian hypofunction) and stored in RNA-later buffer for future transcriptomic work. We measured length and width for each ovary with a digital caliper to the nearest 0.1 mm and calculated their volume based on the assumption that ovaries are ellipsoids with equal height and width. We also inspected each ovary for the presence of prehierarchal follicles and counted the number of pre-ovulatory follicles if any were present. We took photographs of one normally developed ovary from a pure house sparrow female and one atrophied ovary from an F1-hybrid female (cross between a house sparrow sire and a Spanish sparrow dam). We performed an ANOVA to test for significant differences in ovary volume between hybrid and pure-species females and also between species. We also investigated whether the ovary width or length of some hybrid females (i.e. those that exhibited atrophied ovaries) were significant statistical outliers compared to the distribution of pure-species ovary widths or lengths using the Z-score method. A Fisher's exact test was performed to determine whether the proportion of individuals with ovarian hypofunction was elevated in hybrids relative to pure individuals. Furthermore, to investigate whether potential differences in follicle development between normal and potentially atrophied ovaries were not only physical but also functional, we used an ANOVA to test for species and hybrid differences in the number of pre-ovulatory follicles. We then conducted a one sample t test to determine whether the average number of pre-ovulatory follicles found in normal ovaries, irrespective of species, was significantly different from 0 (the number found in all atrophied ovaries).

    All individuals in the study had morphological features within their respective species ranges: F1 hybrids did not differ from either parent species in tarsus or wing length, beak height or body mass (Table 1). However, on average, hybrid females had significantly smaller ovaries than pure species females (F1, 17 = 5.64; p = 0.030; pure species volume: mean: 1202.7 mm3, SD: 472.8; hybrid volume: mean: 531.0 mm3, SD:729.8), while there was no significant difference in ovarian volume between house and Spanish sparrow females (F1, 11 = 1.85; p = 0.20) (Fig. 1a, b). Furthermore, three hybrid females (all fathered by a house sparrow male and Spanish sparrow female) were significant outliers (Fig. 1a; p = 0.05) in terms of ovary width and length, with surprisingly narrow and short ovaries, suggesting severe atrophy, which was not the case for any pure species females. This meant that 50 % of the hybrid females (n = 6) had atrophied ovaries, which were characterized by a drastic reduction in size (Fig. 1a, d) compared to pure house sparrow (n = 8) and Spanish sparrow females (n = 4). This difference represents a significantly higher incidence of ovarian atrophy in hybrids (p = 0.025; Fig. 1d). Moreover, prehierarchal follicles were detected in all ovaries scored as normal, whereas none could be detected in ovaries scored as atrophied (Table 2), which suggests that atrophied ovaries differ both physically and functionally from normal ovaries. Additionally, in a high proportion of individuals with a normal ovary (pure species: 7/12; hybrids: 3/3), pre-ovulatory follicles could be observed (although in the three hybrid individuals with normal ovaries only one pre-ovulatory follicle could be observed), unlike in individuals with an atrophied ovary (0/3) (Table 2). The number of pre-ovulatory follicles in pure species females was also not significantly different from hybrids with normal ovaries (ANOVA: F1, 14 = 7.86; p = 0.112) but the average number of pre-ovulatory follicles found in normal ovary individuals (mean: 1.47, standard deviation: 1.35) was significantly different from 0 (one-sample t test: t = 4.19; p = 0.001) and hence from what was found in hybrid individuals with atrophied ovaries.

    Table  1.  Morphometric measurements of the two parent species and F1 hybrids
    Species P. domesticus Hybrid P. hispaniolensis
    Tarsus length (mm) 19.0 (1.0) 19.4 (0.4) 19.7 (0.5)
    Wing length (mm) 77.6 (2.6) 76.3 (0.9) 78.3 (0.3)
    Weight (g) 27.4 (2.8) 26.9 (3.8) 27.9 (3.5)
    Beak height (mm) 7.87 (0.3) 7.93 (0.2) 8.03 (0.4)
    Mean and standard deviation (in parentheses)
     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV
    Figure  1.  Comparison of the prevalence of ovarian hypofunction between females of both study species (Spanish sparrows, P. hispaniolensis, and house sparrows, P. domesticus) and their hybrids. a Ovary width and length for both hybrid and pure-species females. Black ellipse encircles individual datapoints which are significant outliers in terms of width and length. b Boxplots showing median, quartiles and 5- and 95-percentiles for ovary volume across hybrid and pure-species individuals. Single data-points indicate extreme observations. c Photograph of a typical (normal) ovary and an atrophied ovary. d Proportion of females exhibiting ovarian atrophy in each category (n is the sample size for each type of female)
    Table  2.  Presence of immature and pre-ovulatory follicles in atrophied ovaries versus normal ovaries
    Ovary type Normal (n = 15) Atrophied (n = 3)
    Presence of prehierarchal follicles (%) 100 0
    Presence of pre-ovulatory follicles (%) 66.7 0
    Average number of pre-ovulatory follicles 1.47 0
     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV

    Our finding of underdeveloped or atrophied ovaries, combined with the complete absence of follicular development in otherwise phenotypically normal and viable adult hybrid females, is symptomatic of ovarian hypofunction, and suggests that these individuals were unable to produce ova (Oguntunji and Alabi 2010). Anecdotally, and consistent with Haldane's rule (Haldane 1922), two hybrid males produced during the experiment exhibited normal sperm function (i.e. motility) relative to individuals from both pure species (Cramer et al. 2015). Strong postzygotic barriers between the house sparrow and Spanish sparrow may seem surprising given that historical hybridization between the two species led to the formation of the hybrid Italian sparrow (Hermansen et al. 2011). Although as many as 9 % of bird species are known to hybridize (Grant and Grant 1992; Mc Carthy 2006), the Italian sparrow is the only bird species that has been shown to be of hybrid origin and to have developed reproductive barriers against both parent species (Hermansen et al. 2011; Trier et al. 2014; but see Brelsford et al. (2011) for another case of an avian taxon of hybrid origin). Thus, there appear to be strong constraints on hybrid speciation in birds. Postzygotic isolation mechanisms may represent such an obstacle (Nolte and Tautz 2010), but these appear to evolve rather slowly in birds (Grant et al. 1996; Price and Bouvier 2002). Recently, Trier et al. (2014) found that genetic incompatibilities isolate the Italian sparrow from its parent species. Furthermore, these genetic incompatibilities represent a subset of those found to isolate house and Spanish sparrows where they occur in sympatry (Hermansen et al. 2014). Identifying the physiological effects of these incompatibilities and determining if these are extrinsic (leading to maladaptation in hybrids) or intrinsic (leading to inviable or infertile hybrids) increases our understanding of mechanisms acting during hybrid speciation.

    Here, we experimentally confirm that intrinsic genetic incompatibilities isolate the house and Spanish sparrows, and that these manifest as an increase in the incidence of ovarian hypofunction in hybrid individuals. Interestingly, previous genetic studies have shown that genetic incompatibilities between these two species are predominantly mito-nuclear and sex-linked (Trier et al. 2014). Sex-linked incompatibilities have also been found to lead to hybrid sterility in many other systems (Payseur et al. 2004; Qvarnström and Bailey 2008). Trier et al. (2014) identified six Z-linked candidate incompatibility loci between the hybrid Italian sparrow and either of the parent species. Evidence suggests that these loci have been sorted during the hybrid speciation process in such a way that one subset of the genes function as reproductive barriers against the Spanish sparrow, and a different subset against the house sparrow (Hermansen et al. 2014; Trier et al. 2014). One of these six loci associated with reproductive isolation between the Italian and Spanish sparrow (Trier et al. 2014) as well as between the house and Spanish sparrow (Hermansen et al. 2014) is situated in the coding region of the gene GTF2H2, a transcription factor highly expressed in oocytes (Kakourou et al. 2013). This gene has been shown to be involved in premature ovarian hypofunction (Aboura et al. 2009) and polycystic ovary syndromes (Haouzi et al. 2012) in other vertebrates. If GTF2H2 is indeed contributing to ovarian hypofunction in sparrow hybrids, it may have been instrumental in this hybrid speciation event. In the future, mapping the occurrence of ovarian atrophy to candidate genes such as GTF2H2 in sparrow hybrids would yield the ultimate link needed to establish the importance of parental incompatibility sorting during hybrid speciation. Hence, more experimental work should be conducted on the biological consequences of postzygotic barriers to unravel the genetic predispositions to hybrid speciation.

    The data set supporting the results of this article will be available in the DRYAD repository [unique persistent identifier and hyperlink to dataset(s) in http://format], upon acceptance.

    FE, FH, JSH, GPS carried out the breeding experiment. FE, MR, AR and ERAC carried out or assisted with the dissections, AR measured the ovaries, MR evaluated follicular activity. FE and ERAC conducted the statistical analyses. FE, MR, AJ and GPS participated in the design of the study and its coordination. FE wrote the manuscript and all authors helped to draft it. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

    This study is the result of a collaboration between two research groups: the Sparrow Group at the Department of Biosciences (University of Oslo) and the Sex and Evolution Research Group at the Natural History Museum (University of Oslo) and was initiated by GPS as part of large research project on hybridization in Passer species.

    We thank the numerous assistants who helped in the field and during the experimental phase of this project. This study was funded by the Research Council of Norway (GPS, AJ), the Swedish Research Council (FH, FE, AR), the University of Oslo (JSH) and the Marie-Curie Foundation (FE). All authors declare that the present study complies with the current laws and ethical standards of animal research in Norway. Ethical permission was issued to F. Haas and M. Rowe (Norwegian Animal Research Authority-FOTS ID 2394 and Norwegian Animal Research Authority-FOTS ID 6323).

    The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

  • Afik D, Karasov WH (1995) The trade-offs between digestion rate and efficiency in warblers and their ecological implications. Ecology 76:2247–2257
    Austin JE, Fredrickson LH (1987) Body and organ mass and body composition of postbreeding female lesser scaup. Auk 104:694–699
    Bairlein F (1985) Efficiency of food utilization during fat deposition in the long-distance migratory garden warbler, Sylvia borin. Oecologia 68:118–125
    Barton NWH, Houston DC (1994) Morphological adaptation of the digestive tract in relation to feeding ecology of raptors. J Zool 232:133–150
    Biebach H (1996) Energetics of Winter and Migratory Fattening. In: Carey C (ed) Avian Energetics and Nutritional Ecology. Chapman and Hall, New York, pp 280–323
    Bryant DM, Hails CJ, Prys–Jones R (1985) Energy expenditure by freeliving dippers (Cinclus cinclus) in winter. Condor 87:177–186
    Caviedes-Vidal E, McWhorter TJ, Lavin SR, Chediack JG, Tracy CR, Karasov WH (2007) The digestive adaptation of flying vertebrates: high intestinal paracellular absorption compensates for smaller guts. Proc Natl Acad Sci 104:19132–19137
    Chamane S, Downs CT (2009) Seasonal effects on metabolism and thermoregulation abilities of the red-winged starling (onychognathusmorio). J Therm Biol 34:337–341
    Cooper SJ (2000) Seasonal energetics of mountain chickadees and juniper titmice. Condor 102:635–644
    Cooper SJ (2007) Daily and seasonal variation in body mass and visible fat in mountain chickadees and juniper titmice. Wilson J Ornithol 119:720–724
    Corp N, Gorman ML, Speakman JR (1999) Daily energy expenditure of free-living male wood mice in different habitats and seasons. Funct Ecol 13:1365–2435
    Dawson WR, Carey C (1976) Seasonal acclimation to temperature in cardueline finches. J Comp Physiol 112:317–333
    Dawson WR, Marsh RL (1986) Winter fattening in the American goldfinch and the possible role of temperature in its regulation. Physiol Zool 59:353–369
    Dawson WR, Marsh RL, Buttemer WA, Carey C (1983) Seasonal and geographic variation of cold resistance in house finches Carpodacus mexicanus. Physiol Zool 56:353–369
    DeGolier TF, Mahoney SA, Duke GE (1999) Relationship of cecal lengths to food habits, taxonomic position, and intestinal lengths. Condor 101:622–634
    Evans PR (1976) Energy balance and optimal foraging strategies in shorebirds: some implications for their distributions and movements in the non–breeding season. Ardea 64:117–139
    Guglielmo CG, Williams TD (2003) Phenotypic flexibility of body composition in relation to migratory state, age, and sex in the western sandpiper (Calidris mauri). Physiol Biochem Zool 76:84–98
    Guillemette M, Butler PJ (2012) Seasonal variation in energy expenditure is not related to activity level or water temperature in a large diving bird. J Exp Biol 215:3161–3168
    Hammond KA, Diamond J (1997) Maximum sustained energy budgets in humans and animals. Nature 386:457–462
    Hegemann A, Matson KD, Versteegh MA, Tieleman BI (2012) Wild skylarks seasonally modulate energy budgets but maintain energetically costly inflammatory immune responses throughout the annual cycle. PLoS One 7:e36358
    Karasov WH (1990) Digestion in birds: chemical and physiological determinants and ecological implications. Stud Avian Biol 13:39l–415l
    Karasov WH (1996) Digestive Plasticity in Avian Energetics and Feeding Ecology. In: Carey C (ed) Avian Energetics and Nutritional Ecology. Chapman and Hall, New York, pp 61–84
    Karasov WH (2011) Digestive physiology: a view from molecules to ecosystem. Am J Physiol 301:R276–R284
    Karasov WH, Pinshow B, Starck JM, Afik D (2004) Anatomical and histological changes in the alimentary tract of migrating blackcaps (Sylvia atricapilla): a comparison among fed, fasted, food–restricted, and refed birds. Physiol Biochem Zool 77:149–160
    Karasov WH, Martínez Del Rio C, Caviedes-Vidal E (2011) Ecological physiology of diet and digestive systems. Annu Rev Physiol 73:69–93
    Kehoe FP, Ankney CD (1985) Variation in digestive organ size among five species of diving drcks (Aythya spp.). Can J Zool 63:2339–2342
    Kelly JP (1998) Behavior and energy budgets of belted kingfishers in winter. J Field Ornitho 69:75–84
    Kelly JP, Weathers WW (2002) Effects of feeding time constraints on body mass regulation and energy expenditure in wintering dunlin (Calidris alpina). Behav Ecol 13:766–775
    Kendeigh SC (1945) Effect of temperature and season on energy resources of the English sparrow. Auk 66:766–775
    King JR (1961) The bioenergetics of vernal premigratory fat deposition in the white-crowned sparrow. Condor 63:128–142
    Klaassen M, Oltrogge M, Trost L (2004) Basal metabolic rate, food intake, and body mass in cold- and warm-acclimated Garden Warblers. Comp Biochem Physiol A 137:639–647
    Kvist A, Lindström Å (2003) Gluttony in migratory waders–unprecedented energy assimilation rates in vertebrates. Oikos 103:397–402
    Landys-Ciannelli MM, Piersma T, Jukema J (2003) Strategic size changes of internal organs and muscle tissue in the bar-tailed godwit during fat storage on a spring stopover site. Funct Ecol 17:151–159
    Lavin SR, Karasov WH, Ives AR, Middleton KM, Garland T Jr (2008) Morphometrics of the avian small intestine compared with that of nonflying mammals: a phylogenetic approach. Physiol Biochem Zool 81:526–550
    Levey DJ, Karasov WH (1989) Digestive responses of temperate birds switched to fruit or insect diets. Auk 106:675–686
    Li XS, Wang DH (2005) Seasonal adjustments in body mass and thermogenesis in Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus): the roles of short photoperiod and cold. J Comp Physiol B 175:593–600
    Li QF, Sun RY, Huang CX, Wang ZK, Liu XT, Hou JJ, Liu JS, Cai LQ, Li N, Zhang SZ, Wang Y (2001) Cold adaptive thermogenesis in small mammals from different geographical zones of China. Comp Biochem Physiol A 129:949–961
    Liknes ET, Swanson DL (2011) Phenotypic flexibility of body composition associated with seasonal acclimatization in passerine birds. J Therm Biol 36:363–370
    Liu JS, Li M (2006) Phenotypic flexibility of metabolic rate and organ masses among tree sparrows Passer montanus in seasonal acclimatization. Acta Zool Sin 52:469–477
    Lou Y, Yu TL, Huang CM, Zhao T, Li HH, Li CJ (2013) Seasonal variations in the energy budget of Elliot's pheasant (syrmaticus ellioti) in cage. Zool Res 34: E19–E25
    MacKinnon J, Phillipps K (2000) A Field Guide to the Birds of China. Oxford University Press, London
    Marsh RL, Dawson WR (1989) Avian Adjustments to Cold. In: Wang LCH (ed) Advances in Comparative and Environmental Physiology 4: Animal Adaptation to Cold. Springer, New York, pp 205–253
    McKinney RA, McWilliams SR (2005) A new model to estimate daily energy expenditure for wintering waterfowl. Wilson Bull 117:44–55
    McWilliams SR, Karasov WH (2001) Phenotypic flexibility in digestive system structure and function in migratory birds and its ecological significance. Comp Biochem Physiol A 128:579–593
    Ni XY, Lin L, Zhou FF, Wang XH, Liu JS (2011) Effect of photoperiod on body mass, organ masses and energy metabolism in Chinese bulbul (Pycnonotus sinensis). Acta Ecol Sin 31:1703–1713
    Novoa FF, Veloso C, López–Calleja V, Bozinovic F (1996) Seasonal changes in diet, digestive morphology and digestive efficiency in the rufous–collared sparrow (Zonotrichia capensis) in central Chile. Condor 98:873–876
    Nzama SN, Downs CT, Brown M (2010) Seasonal variation in the metabolismtemperature relation of house sparrow (passer domesticus) in KwaZulu-Natal, south Africa. J Therm Biol 35:100–104
    O'Connor TP (1995) Metabolic characteristics and body composition in house finches: effects of seasonal acclimatization. J Comp Physiol B 165:298–305
    Pang BZ (1981) Diet habit of Pycnonotus sinensis. Chin J Zool 4:75–76
    Paulus SL (1982) Gut morphology of gadwalls in Louisiana in winter. J Wildl Manage 46:483–489
    Pendergast BA, Boag DA (1973) Seasonal changes in the internal anatomy of spruce grouse in Alberta. Auk 90:307–317
    Peng HY, Wen QH, Huang J, Huang YX (2008) The study of spring diet habit of three species of pycnonotidae. Sichuang J Zool 27:99–101
    Peng LJ, Tang XL, Liu JS, Meng HT (2010) The effect of thyroid hormone on basal thermogenesis (pycnonotus sinensis). Acta Ecol Sin 30:1500–1507
    Piersma T, Drent J (2003) Phenotypic flexibility and the evolution of organismal design. Trends Ecol Evol 18:228–233
    Pohl H, West GC (1973) Daily and seasonal variation in metabolic response to cold during rest and exercise in the common redpoll. Comp Biochem Physiol A 45:851–867
    Pulliainen E, Tunkkari P (1983) Seasonal changes in the gut length of the willow grouse (lagopus lagopus) in Finnish Lapland. Ann Zool Fennici 20:53–56
    Reinecke KJ, Stone TL, Owen RB Jr (1982) Seasonal carcass composition and energy balance of female black ducks in Maine. Condor 84:420–426
    Sibley RM (1981) Strategies in Digestion and Defecation. In: Townsend CR, Calow P (eds) Physiological Ecology: an Evolutionary Approach to Resource Use. Blackwell, Oxford, pp 109–139
    Starck JM (1996) Phenotypic plasticity, cellular dynamics, and epithelial turnover of the intestine of Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica). J Zool 238:53–79
    Starck JM (1999a) Phenotypic flexibility of the avian gizzard: rapid, reversible and repeated changes of organ size in response to changes in dietary fibre content. J Exp Biol 202:3171–3179
    Starck JM (1999b) Structural flexibility of the gastro–intestinal tract of vertebrates–implications for evolutionary morphology. Zool Anz 238:87–101
    Starck JM, Rahmaan GHA (2003) Phenotypic flexibility of structure and function of the digestive system of Japanese quail. J Exp Biol 206:1887–1897
    Stokkan KA, Harvey S, Klandorf H, Blix AS (1985) Endocrine changes associated with fat deposition and mobilization in Svalbard ptarmigan (Lagopus taurus hyperboreas). Gen Comp Endocrinol 58:76–80
    Stokkan KA, Mortensen A, Blix AS (1986) Food intake, feeding rhythm, and body mass regulation in Svalbard rock ptarmigan. Am J Physiol 251:R264–R267
    Swanson DL (1991) Seasonal adjustments in metabolism and insulation in the dark-eyed junco. Condor 93:538–545
    Swanson DL (2010) Seasonal Metabolic Variation in Birds: Functional and Mechanistic Correlates. In: Thompson CF (ed) Current Ornithology. Springer, Berlin, pp 75–129
    Tieleman BI, Williams JS, Buschur ME, Brown CR (2003) Phenotypic variation of larks along an aridity gradient: are desert birds more flexible? Ecology 84:1800–1815
    Villarin JJ, Schaeffer PJ, Markle RA, Lindstedt ST (2003) Chronic cold exposure increases liver oxidative capacity in the marsupial Monodelphis domestica. Comp Biochem Physiol A 136:621–630
    Weathers WW, Sullivan KA (1993) Seasonal patterns of time and energy allocation by birds. Physiol Zool 66:511–536
    Webster MD, Weathers WW (2000) Seasonal changes in energy and water use by verdins, Auriparus flaviceps. J Exp Biol 203:3333–3344
    Williams J, Tieleman BI (2000) Flexibility in basal metabolic rate and evaporative water loss among hoopoe larks exposed to different environmental temperatures. J Exp Biol 203:3153–3159
    Wu YN, Lin L, Xiao YC, Zhou LM, Wu MS, Zhang HY, Liu JS (2014) Effects of temperature acclimation on body mass and energy budget in the Chinese bulbul Pycnonotus sinensis. Zool Res 35:33–41
    Yuni LPEK, Rose RW (2005) Metabolism of winter-acclimatized New Holland honeyeaters Phylidonyris novaehollandiae from Hobart, Tasmania. Acta Zool Sin 51:338–343
    Zhang YP, Liu JS, Hu XJ, Yang Y, Chen LD (2006) Metabolism and thermoregulation in two species of passerines from south-eastern China in summer. Acta Zool Sin 52:641–647
    Zhang GK, Fang YY, Jiang XH, Liu JS, Zhang YP (2008) Adaptive plasticity in metabolic rate and organ masses among Pycnonotus sinensis, in seasonal acclimatization. Chin J Zool 43:13–19
    Zhao ZJ, Chi QS, Cao J, Han YD (2010) The energy budget, thermogenic capacity and behavior in Swiss mice exposed to a consecutive decrease in temperatures. J Exp Biol 213:3988–3997
    Zheng GM, Zhang CZ (2002) Birds in China. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing
    Zheng WH, Li M, Liu JS, Shao SL (2008a) Seasonal acclimatization of metabolism in Eurasian tree sparrows (Passer montanus). Comp Biochem Physiol A 151:519–525
    Zheng WH, Liu JS, Jang XH, Fang YY, Zhang GK (2008b) Seasonal variation on metabolism and thermoregulation in Chinese bulbul. J Therm Biol 33:315–319
    Zheng WH, Fang YY, Jang XH, Zhang GK, Liu JS (2010) Comparison of thermogenic character of liver and muscle in Chinese bulbul Pycnonotus sinensis between summer and winter. Zool Res 31:319–327
    Zheng WH, Lin L, Liu JS, Pan H, Cao MT, Hu YL (2013) Physiological and biochemical thermoregulatory responses of Chinese bulbuls pycnonotus sinensis to warm temperature: phenotypic flexibility in a small passerine. J Therm Biol 38:483–490
    Zheng WH, Liu JS, Swanson DL (2014) Seasonal phenotypic flexibility of body mass, organ masses, and tissue oxidative capacity and their relationship to RMR in Chinese bulbuls. Physiol Biochem Zool 87:432–444
    Zhou W, Wang YP, Chen DH, Liu JS (2010) Diurnal rhythms of Chinese bulbul (Pycnonotus sinensis) body temperature, body mass, and energy metabolism. Chin J Ecol 29:2395–2400
  • Related Articles

Catalog

    Figures(5)  /  Tables(2)

    Article Metrics

    Article views (246) PDF downloads (25) Cited by()

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return