CHANGES IN LEAN MASS AND IN ORGANS OF NUTRIENT ASSIMILATION IN A LONG-DISTANCE PASSERINE MIGRANT AT A SPRINGTIME STOPOVER SITE

Citation
Wh. Karasov et B. Pinshow, CHANGES IN LEAN MASS AND IN ORGANS OF NUTRIENT ASSIMILATION IN A LONG-DISTANCE PASSERINE MIGRANT AT A SPRINGTIME STOPOVER SITE, Physiological zoology, 71(4), 1998, pp. 435-448
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology,Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0031935X
Volume
71
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
435 - 448
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-935X(1998)71:4<435:CILMAI>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
The primary energy source for migration is fat, but nonfat body compon ents can vary in concert with lipid stores in some migrants. The goals of this study were (1) to validate for a small Old World warbler (the blackcap, Sylvia atricapilla) nondestructive methods to measure lean and fat mass, (2) to quantify the relative contribution of lean mass t o body-mass change of migrants, and (3) to ascertain what lean tissues might be involved. Using total-body electrical conductivity and dilut ion space of isotope-labeled water, we measured lean and fat mass with precision of 3%-4% and 10%-15%, respectively. In newly arrived migran ts with apparently similar structural size (tarsus length), there was a significant positive correlation between lean mass and fat mass; 37% of each unit change was lean mass and 63% fat. Captive blackcaps, fed ad lib. for 7 d, gained body mass, with 40% being lean mass. When cap tives were fasted 1.5-3 d, both body mass and lean mass declined; lean mass accounted for 42% of body mass lost, In fasted birds, the masses of liver, stomach, and small intestine declined and accounted for 44% of the total lean mass decline, 2. disproportionate amount considerin g that these organs make up only 11% of a blackcap's lean mass. In fre shly captured blackcaps, organ masses were positively correlated with lean mass minus the organ masses, suggesting that these organs are a s ource of lean mass catabolized by migrants. We conclude that migrants' need for protein to rebuild lean mass during stopover could constrain diet selection and require increased foraging time, thus slowing mass gain and lengthening overall migration time. Also, stopover time may be lengthened if time is required to rebuild atrophied organs that are important in food digestion and assimilation.