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Thermoregulation in ratites: A review

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, ISSN: 0816-1089, Vol: 48, Issue: 10, Page: 1293-1301
2008
  • 21
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 39
    Captures
  • 5
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
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  • Citations
    21
    • Citation Indexes
      21
  • Captures
    39
  • Mentions
    5
    • References
      4
      • Wikipedia
        4
    • News Mentions
      1
      • News
        1

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Biological sciences / Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences, "EFFECTS OF SEASON, SEX AND TIME OF DAY ON OSTRICH BREEDER (Struthio camelus) BEHAVIOR."

Byline: B. Yilmaz Dikmen Keywords: Ostrich (Struthio camelus), climate-change, behavior, animal welfare. INTRODUCTION Ostriches are commercially raised in many countries around the world for their

Conference Paper Description

Laboratory and free-ranging studies on the emu, ostrich and kiwi show ratites to be competent homeotherms. While body temperature and basal metabolic rate are lower in ratites than other birds, all of the thermoregulatory adaptations present in other birds are well established in ratites. The thermoneutral zone has been established for the emu and kiwi, and extends to 10°C. Below that zone, homeothermy is achieved via the efficient use of insulation and elevated metabolic heat production. In the heat, emus and ostriches increase respiratory evaporative water loss and use some cutaneous water loss. Respiratory alkalosis is avoided by reducing tidal volume. In severe heat, tidal volume increases, but the emu becomes hypoxic and hypocapnic, probably by altering blood flow to the parabronchi, resulting in ventilation/perfusion inhomogeneities. Ostriches are capable of uncoupling brain temperature from arterial blood temperature, a phenomenon termed selective brain cooling. This mechanism may modulate evaporative effector responses by manipulating hypothalamic temperature, as in mammals. The implications of thermal physiology for ratite production systems include elevated metabolic costs for homeothermy at low ambient temperature. However, the emu and ostrich are well adapted to high environmental temperatures. © CSIRO 2008.

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