Abstract
The water balance of nectarivores is tightly linked to their energy balance. When nectar is dilute, consumption of a large water excess is inevitable. We investigated energy and water balance in lesser double-collared sunbirds, Nectarinia chalybea (8 g), kept at 20 °C and fed different nectar concentrations (0.4, 0.8 M sucrose or 1.2 M sucrose). The mass of sucrose consumed, body mass, day-time mass gain and night-time mass loss were the same irrespective of diet, the birds compensating energetically for changes in sucrose concentration by drinking greater volumes of the more dilute solutions. Sunbirds consumed between 0.5 times and 1.8 times their body mass in preformed water per day, depending on sucrose concentration, and excreted around 75% of the water. The difference between water gain (preformed and metabolic water) and excreted water is assumed to equal evaporative water loss, and was similar on 1.2 M and 0.8 M sucrose, but was higher on a diet of 0.4 M sucrose. The osmolalities and K+ and Na+ concentrations of the excreted fluid were extremely low, so that sunbird urine resembled that of hummingbirds and freshwater vertebrates rather than that of typical terrestrial vertebrates. N. chalybea is able to maintain energy and water balance over a range of nectar concentrations by adjusting the volume of solution consumed and by excreting copious, dilute fluid.
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Accepted: 2 January 1999
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Lotz, C., Nicolson, S. Energy and water balance in the lesser double-collared sunbird (Nectarinia chalybea) feeding on different nectar concentrations. J Comp Physiol B 169, 200–206 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003600050212
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003600050212