Heat stress reduces growth rate of red deer calf: Climate warming implications
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Date
2020Author
Pérez-Barbería, Javier
García Díaz, Andrés José
Cappelli, Jamil
Landete Castillejos, Tomás
Pérez, Martina
Gallego, Laureano
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Climate models agree in predicting scenarios of global warming. In endothermic species
heat stress takes place when they are upper their thermal neutral zone. Any physiological or
behavioural mechanism to mitigate heat stress is at the cost of diverting energy from other
physiological functions, with negative repercussions for individual fitness. Tolerance to heat
stress differs between species, age classes and sexes, those with the highest metabolic
rates being the most sensitive to stressing thermal environments. This is especially impor tant during the first months of life, when most growth takes place. Red deer (Cervus ela phus) is supposedly well adapted to a wide range of thermal environments, based on its
worldwide distribution range, but little is known about the direct effect that heat stress may
have on calf growth. We assessed the effect that heat stress, measured by heat stress indi ces and physical environment variables (air temperature, relative air humidity, wind speed
and solar radiation), have on calf and mother body weights from calf´s birth to weaning. We
used 9265 longitudinal weekly body weight records of calf and mother across 19 years in
captive Iberian red deer. We hypothesised that (i) heat stress in hot environments has a
negative effect on calf growth, especially in males, as they are more energetically demand ing to produce than females; and that (ii) the body weight of the mother through lactation
should be negatively affected by heat stress. Our results supported hypothesis (i) but not so
clearly hypothesis (ii). By weaning (day 143) calves growing under low heat stress environ ment grew up to 1.2 kg heavier than those growing in high heat stress environment, and
males were more affected by heat stress than females. The results have implications in ani mal welfare, geographical clines in body size and adaptation to climate change