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Latitudinal but not elevational variation in blood glucose level is linked to life history across passerine birds

Oldřich Tomášek, Lukáš Bobek, Tereza Kauzálová, Ondřej Kauzál, Marie Adámková, Kryštof Horák, Sampath Anandan Kumar, Judith Pouadjeu Manialeu, Pavel Munclinger, Eric Djomo Nana, Télesphore Benoît Nguelefack, Ondřej Sedláček, Tomáš Albrecht

2022Ecology Letters20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Macrophysiological research is vital to our understanding of mechanisms underpinning global life history variation and adaptation to diverse environments. Here, we examined latitudinal and elevational variation in a key substrate of energy metabolism and an emerging physiological component of pace-of-life syndromes, blood glucose concentration. Our data, collected from 61 European temperate and 99 Afrotropical passerine species, revealed that baseline blood glucose increases with both latitude and elevation, whereas blood glucose stress response shows divergent directions, being stronger at low latitudes and high elevations. Low baseline glucose in tropical birds, compared to their temperate counterparts, was mainly explained by their low fecundity, consistent with the slow pace-of-life syndrome in the tropics. In contrast, elevational variation in this trait was decoupled from fecundity, implying a unique montane pace-of-life syndrome combining slow-paced life histories with fast-paced physiology. The observed patterns suggest that pace-of-life syndromes do not evolve along the single fast-slow axis.

Topics & Concepts

PasserineBiologyEcologyTemperate climateAdaptation (eye)LatitudeFecundityLife history theoryZoologyLife historyGeographyDemographyPopulationGeodesySociologyNeuroscienceAnimal Behavior and ReproductionAvian ecology and behaviorPhysiological and biochemical adaptations
Latitudinal but not elevational variation in blood glucose level is linked to life history across passerine birds | Litcius