2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-4877.2012.00287.x
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Direct impacts of climatic warming on heat stress in endothermic species: seabirds as bioindicators of changing thermoregulatory constraints

Abstract: There is now abundant evidence that contemporary climatic change has indirectly affected a wide-range of species by changing trophic interactions, competition, epidemiology and habitat. However, direct physiological impacts of changing climates are rarely reported for endothermic species, despite being commonly reported for ectotherms. We review the evidence for changing physiological constraints on endothermic vertebrates at high temperatures, integrating theoretical and empirical perspectives on the morpholo… Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…That animals thrive at ambient temperatures above the UCT indicate that life outside the TNZ is sustainable energetically (e.g. Oswald & Arnold, ). If it were not, all mammals would have been eliminated long ago.…”
Section: Thermoneutral Zone: Not About Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That animals thrive at ambient temperatures above the UCT indicate that life outside the TNZ is sustainable energetically (e.g. Oswald & Arnold, ). If it were not, all mammals would have been eliminated long ago.…”
Section: Thermoneutral Zone: Not About Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The heads of these birds are black; thus, they avoided facing the sun by fluffing the crested nape that faces the sun during the hottest part of the day. The fluffed crested nape may disperse the solar radiation and cool the individuals' heads (Oswald and Arnold 2012). Also, this behavior maximized the shading of the eggs by keeping their bodies between the eggs and the direct sunlight (i.e., under the direct shade of their ventral feathers).…”
Section: Colony Disturbancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…that are long and thin (Allen), whereas equivalent populations from cold climates will have thicker and shorter versions of those body parts. Since the introduction of these ideas almost 200 years ago, these hypotheses have received wide attention, looking at a variety of avian and mammalian species around the world (Brown & Lee, 1969; Danner & Greenberg, 2015; Gohli & Voje, 2016; Gutiérrez‐Pinto et al, 2014; Meiri, Yom‐Tov, & Geffen, 2007; Oswald & Arnold, 2012; Symonds & Tattersall, 2010; Yom‐Tov & Geffen, 2010; Yom‐Tov, Yom‐Tov, Wright, Thorne, & du Feu, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%