Artículo de revista
Osmoregulatory and metabolic costs of salt excretion in the Rufous-collared sparrow Zonotrichia capensis
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A 164 (2013) 314–318
doi 10.1016/j.cbpa.2012.10.027
Autor
Peña Villalobos, Isaac
Valdés Ferranty, Fernanda
Sabat Kirkwood, Alejandro Pablo
Institución
Resumen
Recent experiments on shorebirds have demonstrated that maintaining an active osmoregulatory machinery
is energetically expensive. This may, in part, explain diet and habitat selection in birds with salt glands.
However little is known about the osmoregulatory costs in birds lacking functional salt glands. In these
birds, osmotic work is done almost exclusively by the kidneys. We investigated the osmoregulatory cost in
a bird species lacking functional salt glands, the passerine Zonotrichia capensis. After 20 days of acclimation
to fresh water (FW) and salt water (200 mM NaCl, SW), SW birds tended to be heavier than FW birds.
However, this difference was not statistically significant. Total basal metabolic rate was higher in SW birds
as compared with FW birds. Renal and heart masses were also higher in the SW group. We also found greater
medullary development and an increase in urine osmolality in the SW group. In spite of Z. capensis' ability to
tolerate a moderate salt load in the laboratory, we hypothesize that increased cost of maintenance produced
by salt consumption may significantly affect energy budget, dietary, and habitat choices in the field.