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Research Article
Environment, behavior and physiology: do birds use barometric pressure to predict storms?
Creagh W. Breuner, Rachel S. Sprague, Stephen H. Patterson, H. Arthur Woods
Journal of Experimental Biology 2013 216: 1982-1990; doi: 10.1242/jeb.081067
Creagh W. Breuner
1Wildlife Biology Program, The University of Montana, 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59812, USA
2Organismal Biology and Ecology, The University of Montana, 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59812, USA
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  • For correspondence: creagh.breuner@umontana.edu
Rachel S. Sprague
1Wildlife Biology Program, The University of Montana, 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59812, USA
3Pacific Islands Regional Office, NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service, Honolulu Hawaii 96814, USA
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Stephen H. Patterson
2Organismal Biology and Ecology, The University of Montana, 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59812, USA
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H. Arthur Woods
2Organismal Biology and Ecology, The University of Montana, 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59812, USA
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SUMMARY

Severe storms can pose a grave challenge to the temperature and energy homeostasis of small endothermic vertebrates. Storms are accompanied by lower temperatures and wind, increasing metabolic expenditure, and can inhibit foraging, thereby limiting energy intake. To avoid these potential problems, most endotherms have mechanisms for offsetting the energetic risks posed by storms. One possibility is to use cues to predict oncoming storms and to alter physiology and behavior in ways that make survival more likely. Barometric pressure declines predictably before inclement weather, and several lines of evidence indicate that animals alter behavior based on changes in ambient pressure. Here we examined the effects of declining barometric pressure on physiology and behavior in the white-crowned sparrow, Zonotrichia leucophrys. Using field data from a long-term study, we first evaluated the relationship between barometric pressure, storms and stress physiology in free-living white-crowned sparrows. We then manipulated barometric pressure experimentally in the laboratory and determined how it affects activity, food intake, metabolic rates and stress physiology. The field data showed declining barometric pressure in the 12–24 h preceding snowstorms, but we found no relationship between barometric pressure and stress physiology. The laboratory study showed that declining barometric pressure stimulated food intake, but had no effect on metabolic rate or stress physiology. These data suggest that white-crowned sparrows can sense and respond to declining barometric pressure, and we propose that such an ability may be common in wild vertebrates, especially small ones for whom individual storms can be life-threatening events.

FOOTNOTES

  • AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

    C.W.B. ran all of the field studies, with contributions from R.S.S. and S.H.P. C.W.B. and H.A.W. devised the laboratory experiments. H.A.W. designed and calibrated the barometric/metabolic chamber design; he also developed the video analysis technique and ran the statistical analyses on the metabolic and pixelated behavioral data. R.S.S. and C.W.B. ran the laboratory experiments, with support from H.A.W. S.H.P. collated, proofed and analyzed the field corticosterone data.

  • Supplementary material available online at http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/216/11/1982/DC1

  • COMPETING INTERESTS

    No competing interests declared.

  • FUNDING

    This work was supported by the National Science Foundation [IBN 0236536, IOS 0747361 to C.W.B.].

  • LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

    AIC
    Akaike's information criterion
    CORT
    corticosterone
    EIA
    enzyme immunoassay
    lme
    linear mixed effects
    PTO
    paratympanic organ
    • © 2013. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd
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    Keywords

    • Activity
    • Corticosterone
    • environmental cues
    • inclement weather
    • Metabolic rate
    • Stress

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    Research Article
    Environment, behavior and physiology: do birds use barometric pressure to predict storms?
    Creagh W. Breuner, Rachel S. Sprague, Stephen H. Patterson, H. Arthur Woods
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2013 216: 1982-1990; doi: 10.1242/jeb.081067
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    Research Article
    Environment, behavior and physiology: do birds use barometric pressure to predict storms?
    Creagh W. Breuner, Rachel S. Sprague, Stephen H. Patterson, H. Arthur Woods
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2013 216: 1982-1990; doi: 10.1242/jeb.081067

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