First published online November 19, 2004
Journal of Experimental Biology 207, 4383-4391 (2004)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2004
doi: 10.1242/jeb.01238
Hummingbirds arrest their kidneys at night: diel variation in glomerular filtration rate in Selasphorus platycercus
Bradley Hartman Bakken1,*,
Todd J. McWhorter2,
Ella Tsahar3 and
Carlos Martínez del Rio1
1 Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY
82071, USA
2 Department of Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
53706, USA
3 Department of Biology, Technion Israel Institute of Technology,
Haifa 32000, Israel

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Fig. 1. Semi-logarithmic plot of data from one representative broad-tailed
hummingbird illustrating (1) our protocol for estimating evening, night and
morning glomerular filtration rates (GFR) and evening renal fractional water
reabsorption and (2) that 14C-labeled L-glucose
appearance in excreta with time follows single-compartment, first-order
kinetics. This particular humming bird had an evening and morning GFR of 1.9
and 1.1 ml h1, respectively (determined using
equation 2); night GFR for this
bird was 0.0 ml h1 (determined using
equation 4). Although data of
[14C] of excreta are loge-transformed here for clarity,
our analyses were performed on non-transformed data
(Motulsky and Ransnas, 1987 ).
We injected this particular hummingbird at 17:43 h and collected excreta
samples until 19:43 h. Ureteral urine and plasma samples were taken from this
hummingbird at 19:45 and 19:47 h, respectively. Our morning excreta
collections suggested that whole-kidney GFR was interrupted overnight: there
were no differences between the [14C] of excreta in the first
morning and last evening samples.
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Fig. 2. Diel variation in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in broad-tailed
hummingbirds. Our GFR estimates for the evening, night and morning were
2.3±0.5, 0.1±0.2 and 0.9±0.6 ml
h1 (N=9), respectively, and were significantly
different from each other. GFRMORNING was lower than
GFREVENING by a factor of 2.6, and GFR'NIGHT was
not different from 0. GFREVENING was approximately 110% of the
allometric prediction (GFRPREDICTED=2.1 ml h1;
Bennett and Hughes, 2003 ).
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Fig. 3. Renal fractional water reabsorption (FWR) is responsive to water loading in
broad-tailed hummingbirds. (A) There was no relationship between water intake
rate and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) during the evening (filled circles)
or morning (open circles). (B) Hummingbirds decreased renal FWR to dispose of
excess ingested water during the evening
(y=0.13x+0.89, r2=0.66,
N=7).
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Fig. 5. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is responsive to water loading in
broad-tailed hummingbirds. (A) During midday, prior to food/water removal, GFR
increased linearly with increased water intake rate
(y=0.78x+1.36, r2=0.52, N=9).
(B) When we returned the food/water, following the 1.5 h deprivation
period, there was no relationship between water intake rate and GFR.
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Fig. 6. Overnight body mass (Mb) losses in broad-tailed
hummingbirds are influenced by the time spent hypothermic. The rate of change
in body mass ( Mb; g h1) during
the night decreased as time (h) spent hypothermic increased
(y=0.02x+0.06, r2=0.69,
N=10).
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Fig. 8. Do nectarivorous birds have different diurnal glomerular filtration rates
(GFRs) compared with equal-sized birds with other dietary habits? (A)
Phylogeny of avian species with GFR data
(Table 1). (B) The relationship
between body mass (Mb; g) and GFR (ml
h1) was described by a power function with an exponent equal
to 0.74±0.26 (N=28). (C) The phylogenetically independent
contrasts between log10(Mb) and
log10(GFR) for nectarivorous birds (filled circles) are within the
95% confidence interval (represented by the broken lines) of the regression
line relating the standardized contrasts of
log10(Mb) and log10(GFR) for species
with other dietary habits. The exponent of this phylogenetically corrected
relationship equals 0.72±0.10 (N=23).
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2004