Publications by authors named "Jacques Larochelle"

While some migratory birds perform non-stop flights of over 11 000 km, many species only spend around 15% of the day in flight during migration, posing a question as to why flight times for many species are so short. Here, we test the idea that hyperthermia might constrain flight duration (FD) in a short-distance migrant using remote biologging technology to measure heart rate, hydrostatic pressure and body temperature in 19 migrating eider ducks (Somateria mollissima), a short-distance migrant. Our results reveal a stop-and-go migration strategy where migratory flights were frequent (14 flights day(-1)) and short (15.

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Many migratory flights take place during cloudless nights, thus under conditions where the sky temperature can commonly be 20 degrees C below local air temperature. The sky then acts as a radiative sink, leading objects exposed to it to have a lower surface temperature than unexposed ones because less infrared energy is received from the sky than from the surfaces that are isothermic to air. To investigate the significance of this effect for heat dissipation during nocturnal flight in birds, we built a wind tunnel with the facility to control wall temperature (TASK) and air temperature (TAIR) independently at air speeds (UWIN) comparable to flying speeds.

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We tested the hypothesis that intermittent hypoxia elicits plasticity in respiratory chemoreflexes in bullfrog tadpoles. Metamorphic tadpoles (Taylor-Kollros stages XVI-XX) were subjected to intermittent hypoxia (PW(O(2))=45 Torr; 12 h/day) or constant normoxia (PW(O(2))=156 Torr) for 2 weeks before ventilatory responses to hypoxia and hypercarbia were measured. Buccal pressure changes were used to quantify the frequency and amplitude of movements associated with gill and lung ventilation.

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