Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/1825
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Type: Journal article
Title: Developmental allometry of pulmonary structure and function in the altricial Australian pelican Pelecanus conspicillatus.
Author: Seymour, R.
Runciman, S.
Baudinette, R.
Pearson, J.
Citation: The Journal of Experimental Biology, 2004; 207(15):2663-2669
Publisher: Company of Biologists Ltd
Issue Date: 2004
ISSN: 0022-0949
1477-9145
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Roger S. Seymour, Sue Runciman, Russell V. Baudinette and James T. Pearson
Abstract: Quantitative methods have been used to correlate maximal oxygen uptake with lung development in Australian pelicans. These birds produce the largest altricial neonates and become some of the largest birds capable of flight. During post-hatching growth to adults, body mass increases by two orders of magnitude (from 88·g to 8.8·kg). Oxygen consumption rates were measured at rest and during exposure to cold and during exercise. Then the lungs were quantitatively assessed using morphometric techniques. Allometric relationships between body mass (M) and gas exchange parameters (Y) were determined and evaluated by examining the exponents of the equation Y=aMb. This intraspecific study was compared to interspecific studies of adult birds reported in the literature. Total lung volume scales similarly in juvenile pelicans (b=1.05) as in adult birds (b=1.02). However, surface area of the blood–gas barrier greatly increases (b=1.25), and its harmonic mean thickness does not significantly change (b=0.02), in comparison to exponents from adult birds (b=0.86 and 0.07, respectively). As a result, the diffusing capacity of the blood–gas tissue barrier increases much more during development (b=1.23) than it does in adult birds of different sizes (b=0.79). It increases in parallel to maximal oxygen consumption rate (b=1.28), suggesting that the gas exchange system is either limited by lung development or possibly symmorphic. The capacity of the oxygen delivery system is theoretically sufficient for powered flight well in advance of the bird’s need to use it.
Keywords: Bird
lung
juvenile
development
respiration
morphometry
diffusing capacity
symmorphosis
Rights: © The Company of Biologists Ltd 2004
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.01071
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.01071
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 2
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications

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