Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm

Abstract Heat waves cause mass mortality of animals, including humans, across the globe annually, which has drawn new attention to how animals cope with high air temperatures. Recent field research has explored behavioral responses to high air temperatures, which can influence reproductive success a...

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Main Authors: Raymond M. Danner, Casey M. Coomes, Elizabeth P. Derryberry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-03-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7194
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spelling doaj-0a225ff065d84db98e883be322086c232021-03-02T01:04:38ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-03-011152261227210.1002/ece3.7194Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endothermRaymond M. Danner0Casey M. Coomes1Elizabeth P. Derryberry2Department of Biology and Marine Biology University of North Carolina Wilmington Wilmington NC USADepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Tulane University New Orleans LA USADepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Tulane University New Orleans LA USAAbstract Heat waves cause mass mortality of animals, including humans, across the globe annually, which has drawn new attention to how animals cope with high air temperatures. Recent field research has explored behavioral responses to high air temperatures, which can influence reproductive success and mortality. Less well studied are the effects of high air temperatures on cognition, which may underlie behavioral changes. Specifically, it is poorly known if cognitive declines occur at high temperatures, and if cognitive and motor components of behavior are similarly affected. We tested how well zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata castanotis), a model for cognition research, performed two learned foraging tasks (color association and detour‐reaching) at mild (22°C) and high (43 and 44°C) air temperatures that occur naturally in their range. We habituated birds to the trial conditions and temperatures on days preceding the test trials and at the trial temperature for 30 min immediately prior to each test trial. Trials lasted less than 10 min. At high air temperatures, zebra finches exhibited heat dissipation behaviors during most tasks, suggesting thermoregulatory challenge. Cognitive performance declined at high air temperatures in two of three measures: Color association was unaffected, but birds missed more food rewards, and did more unproductive behaviors. Motor performance declined at high temperatures on the color association task, including longer times to complete the task, move between food rewards, and process individual seeds. Performance declines varied among components of behavior and among individuals. We combined our behavioral data with existing climate data and predicted that in the austral summer of 2018–2019, zebra finches experienced air temperatures that caused cognitive and motor declines in our captive birds in 34% and 45% of their Australian range, respectively. This study provides novel experimental evidence that high air temperatures cause cognitive and motor performance decline in birds. Further, our results provide insights to how those declines might affect bird ecology and evolution. First, differences in declines among behavioral components may allow identification of behaviors that are most susceptible to decline in the wild. Second, variation in performance declines and heat dissipation behaviors among individuals suggests variability in heat tolerance, which could lead to differential fitness in the wild. Last, these results suggest that high air temperatures cause cognitive declines in the wild and that understanding cognition could help refine predictive models of population persistence.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7194behaviorclimate changecognitioncognitive performanceheat wavezebra finch
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raymond M. Danner
Casey M. Coomes
Elizabeth P. Derryberry
spellingShingle Raymond M. Danner
Casey M. Coomes
Elizabeth P. Derryberry
Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
Ecology and Evolution
behavior
climate change
cognition
cognitive performance
heat wave
zebra finch
author_facet Raymond M. Danner
Casey M. Coomes
Elizabeth P. Derryberry
author_sort Raymond M. Danner
title Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
title_short Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
title_full Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
title_fullStr Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
title_full_unstemmed Simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
title_sort simulated heat waves reduce cognitive and motor performance of an endotherm
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Heat waves cause mass mortality of animals, including humans, across the globe annually, which has drawn new attention to how animals cope with high air temperatures. Recent field research has explored behavioral responses to high air temperatures, which can influence reproductive success and mortality. Less well studied are the effects of high air temperatures on cognition, which may underlie behavioral changes. Specifically, it is poorly known if cognitive declines occur at high temperatures, and if cognitive and motor components of behavior are similarly affected. We tested how well zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata castanotis), a model for cognition research, performed two learned foraging tasks (color association and detour‐reaching) at mild (22°C) and high (43 and 44°C) air temperatures that occur naturally in their range. We habituated birds to the trial conditions and temperatures on days preceding the test trials and at the trial temperature for 30 min immediately prior to each test trial. Trials lasted less than 10 min. At high air temperatures, zebra finches exhibited heat dissipation behaviors during most tasks, suggesting thermoregulatory challenge. Cognitive performance declined at high air temperatures in two of three measures: Color association was unaffected, but birds missed more food rewards, and did more unproductive behaviors. Motor performance declined at high temperatures on the color association task, including longer times to complete the task, move between food rewards, and process individual seeds. Performance declines varied among components of behavior and among individuals. We combined our behavioral data with existing climate data and predicted that in the austral summer of 2018–2019, zebra finches experienced air temperatures that caused cognitive and motor declines in our captive birds in 34% and 45% of their Australian range, respectively. This study provides novel experimental evidence that high air temperatures cause cognitive and motor performance decline in birds. Further, our results provide insights to how those declines might affect bird ecology and evolution. First, differences in declines among behavioral components may allow identification of behaviors that are most susceptible to decline in the wild. Second, variation in performance declines and heat dissipation behaviors among individuals suggests variability in heat tolerance, which could lead to differential fitness in the wild. Last, these results suggest that high air temperatures cause cognitive declines in the wild and that understanding cognition could help refine predictive models of population persistence.
topic behavior
climate change
cognition
cognitive performance
heat wave
zebra finch
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7194
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