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Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 107(2)

Microclimate of nesting burrows of the Rainbow Bee-eater

Alan Lill A B C, Peter J. Fell A

A Wildlife Ecology Research Group, School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton Campus, Vic. 3800, Australia.
B School of Psychology, Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine, Monash University, Clayton Campus, Vic. 3800, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: Alan.Lill@sci.monash.edu.au
 
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Abstract

Burrow-nesting affords protection from predators and climatic extremes, but potentially can pose physiological ‘problems’ for developing birds and attendant adults. Microclimate parameters of burrows of breeding Rainbow Bee-eaters (Merops ornatus) were measured to assess whether they presented such difficulties for young and adults. Estimated mean volume of the brood-chamber was ~4.5 L. Relative humidity was typically 100% in the brood-chamber and chamber air temperature was constant, averaging 4–6°C above ambient levels. The temperature regime of the burrow probably resulted in low thermoregulatory costs for attendant adults and endothermic nestlings. The chamber oxygen (O2) fraction (mean 19.35%) was always lower than ambient values, but mostly not sufficiently low to be problematic for the growing young. Mean pre-internal pipping absolute oxygen consumption rate of embryos (62.9 ± 13.8 mL O2 day–1) did not appear to be strongly influenced by either the protracted incubation period or the reduced O2 partial pressure of the chamber atmosphere. Mean eggshell water-vapour conductance (8.95 mg day–1 kPa–1) was tuned to egg mass rather than egg mass/incubation period. However, eggs still lost ~15% of their mass during incubation because the influence of the small water-vapour pressure difference across the shell (2.91 kPa) and the protraction of the incubation period apparently counteracted each other.

   
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