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Title: Hummingbirds pay a high cost for a warm drink. Author: Lotz CN, Martínez del Rio C, Nicolson SW. Journal: J Comp Physiol B; 2003 Aug; 173(6):455-62. PubMed ID: 12827417. Abstract: Endotherms must warm ingested food to body temperature. Food warming costs may be especially high for nectar-feeding birds, which can ingest prodigious volumes. We formulated a mathematical model to predict the cost of warming nectar as a function of nectar temperature and sugar concentration. This model predicts that the cost of warming nectar should: (1) decrease as a power function of nectar concentration, and (2) increase linearly with the difference between body temperature and nectar temperature. We tested our model on rufous hummingbirds (Selasphorus rufus). A typical experiment consisted of feeding birds nectar of a given concentration at 39 degrees C (equivalent to body temperature) and then at 4 degrees C, and vice versa. We used the percentage change in metabolic rate between the two food temperatures to estimate the cost of warming nectar. The model's predictions were accurately met. When birds had to hover rather than perch during feeding bouts, estimated food-warming costs were only slightly lower. The cost of warming nectar to body temperature appears to be an important yet overlooked aspect of the energy budgets of nectar-feeding birds. Hummingbirds feeding on 5% sucrose solutions at 4 degrees C have to increase their metabolic rate by an amount equivalent to that elicited by a 15 degrees C drop in ambient temperature.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]