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Catabolic capacity of the muscles of shorebird chicks: Maturation of function in relation to body size
- Source :
- Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 74(2), 250-260. University of Chicago Press
- Publication Year :
- 2001
-
Abstract
- Newly hatched precocial chicks of arctic shorebirds are able to walk and regulate their body temperatures to a limited extent. Yet, they must also grow rapidly to achieve independence before the end of the short arctic growing season. A rapid growth rate may conflict with development of mature function, and because of the allometric scaling of thermal relationships, this trade-off might be resolved differently in large and small species. We assessed growth (mass) and functional maturity (catabolic enzyme activity) in leg and pectoral muscles of chicks aged 1-16 d and adults of two scolopacid shorebirds, the smaller dunlin (Calidris alpina: neonate mass 8 g, adult mass 50 g) and larger whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus; neonate mass 34 g, adult mass 380 g). Enzyme activity indicates maximum catabolic capacity, which is one aspect of the development of functional maturity of muscle. The growth rate-maturity hypothesis predicts that the development of catabolic capacity should be delayed in faster-growing muscle masses. Leg muscles of both species were a larger proportion of adult size at hatching and grew faster than pectoral muscles. Pectoral muscles grew more rapidly in the dunlin than in the whimbrel, whereas leg muscles grew more rapidly in the whimbrel. In both species and in both leg and pectoral muscles, enzyme activities generally increased with age, suggesting increasing functional maturity. Levels of citrate synthase activity were similar to those reported for other species, but L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase and pyruvate kinase (PK) activities were comparatively high. Catabolic capacities of leg muscles were initially high compared to those of pectoral muscles, but with the exception of glycolytic (PK) capacities, these subsequently increased only modestly or even decreased as chicks grew. The earlier functional maturity of the more rapidly growing leg muscles, as well as the generally higher functional maturity in muscles of the more rapidly growing dunlin chicks, contradicts the growth rate-maturity function trade-off and suggests that birds have considerable latitude to modify this relationship. Whimbrel chicks, apparently, can rely on allometric scaling of power requirements for locomotion and the thermal inertia of their larger mass to reduce demands on their muscles, whereas dunlin chicks require muscles with higher metabolic capacity from an earlier age. Thus, larger and smaller species may adopt different strategies of growth and tissue maturation.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
food.ingredient
TEMPERATURE REGULATION
Physiology
Zoology
Growing season
Biology
Biochemistry
BREAST
food
Species Specificity
Internal medicine
medicine
Animals
Growth rate
Muscle, Skeletal
SKELETAL-MUSCLES
Numenius phaeopus
ENDOTHERMY
BIRDS
Catabolism
GROWTH-RATE
SHIVERING THERMOGENESIS
biology.organism_classification
Enzyme assay
TIME
Calidris
Endocrinology
AGELAIUS-PHOENICEUS
biology.protein
Body Constitution
Animal Science and Zoology
Allometry
Precocial
JAPANESE-QUAIL
Body Temperature Regulation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15222152
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 74(2), 250-260. University of Chicago Press
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....defb23f6d6955f4d95dbc49a8f4a807a