AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding how different species use metabolic water is essential for creating accurate models to predict their adaptation to environmental changes, like droughts affecting water availability.
  • The study introduces a new method for measuring oxygen isotopes in blood samples to estimate the role of metabolic water in three types of birds, addressing previous research limitations.
  • Findings show that colder temperatures increase metabolic rates while decreasing water intake, resulting in a higher contribution of metabolic water, and highlight differences in the sources of drinking and food water between captive and wild birds.

Article Abstract

Understanding physiological traits and ecological conditions that influence a species reliance on metabolic water is critical to creating accurate physiological models that can assess their ability to adapt to environmental perturbations (e.g., drought) that impact water availability. However, relatively few studies have examined variation in the sources of water animals use to maintain water balance, and even fewer have focused on the role of metabolic water. A key reason is methodological limitations. Here, we applied a new method that measures the triple oxygen isotopic composition of a single blood sample to estimate the contribution of metabolic water to the body water pool of three passerine species. This approach relies on Δ'O, defined as the residual from the tight linear correlation that naturally exists between δO and δO values. Importantly, Δ'17O is relatively insensitive to key fractionation processes, such as Rayleigh distillation in the water cycle that have hindered previous isotope-based assessments of animal water balance. We evaluated the effects of changes in metabolic rate and water intake on Δ'O values of captive rufous-collared sparrows () and two invertivorous passerine species in the genus from the field. As predicted, colder acclimation temperatures induced increases in metabolic rate, decreases in water intake, and increases in the contribution of metabolic water to the body water pool of , causing a consistent change in Δ'O. Measurement of Δ'O also provides an estimate of the δO composition of ingested pre-formed (drinking/food) water. Estimated δO values of drinking/food water for captive were ~ -11‰, which is consistent with that of tap water in Santiago, Chile. In contrast, δO values of drinking/food water ingested by wild-caught were similar to that of seawater, which is consistent with their reliance on marine resources. Our results confirm the utility of this method for quantifying the relative contribution of metabolic versus pre-formed drinking/food water to the body water pool in birds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8450417PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.710026DOI Listing

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