A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage

Exercise-induced muscle damage is a well-described consequence of strenuous exercise, but its potential importance in the evolution of animal activity patterns is unknown. We used plasma creatine kinase (CK) activity as an indicator of muscle damage to investigate whether the high intensity, long-du...

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Main Authors: Guglielmo, Christopher G., Piersma, Theunis, Williams, Tony D.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Company of Biologists 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/204/15/2683
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:jexbio:204/15/2683 2023-05-15T15:09:04+02:00 A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage Guglielmo, Christopher G. Piersma, Theunis Williams, Tony D. 2001-08-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/204/15/2683 en eng Company of Biologists http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/204/15/2683 Copyright (C) 2001, Company of Biologists Research Articles TEXT 2001 fthighwire 2013-05-27T04:29:52Z Exercise-induced muscle damage is a well-described consequence of strenuous exercise, but its potential importance in the evolution of animal activity patterns is unknown. We used plasma creatine kinase (CK) activity as an indicator of muscle damage to investigate whether the high intensity, long-duration flights of two migratory shorebird species cause muscle damage that must be repaired during stopover. In two years of study, plasma CK activity was significantly higher in migrating western sandpipers (a non-synchronous, short-hop migrant), than in non-migrants. Similarly, in the bar-tailed godwit (a synchronous, long-jump migrant), plasma CK activity was highest immediately after arrival from a 4000–5000km flight from West Africa to The Netherlands, and declined before departure for the arctic breeding areas. Late-arriving godwits had higher plasma CK activity than birds that had been at the stopover site longer. Juvenile western sandpipers making their first southward migration had higher plasma CK activity than adults. These results indicate that muscle damage occurs during migration, and that it is exacerbated in young, relatively untrained birds. However, the magnitude of the increases in plasma CK activity associated with migratory flight were relatively small, suggesting that the level of muscle damage is moderate. Migrants may avoid damage behaviourally, or have efficient biochemical and physiological defences against muscle injury. Text Arctic HighWire Press (Stanford University) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic Research Articles
spellingShingle Research Articles
Guglielmo, Christopher G.
Piersma, Theunis
Williams, Tony D.
A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
topic_facet Research Articles
description Exercise-induced muscle damage is a well-described consequence of strenuous exercise, but its potential importance in the evolution of animal activity patterns is unknown. We used plasma creatine kinase (CK) activity as an indicator of muscle damage to investigate whether the high intensity, long-duration flights of two migratory shorebird species cause muscle damage that must be repaired during stopover. In two years of study, plasma CK activity was significantly higher in migrating western sandpipers (a non-synchronous, short-hop migrant), than in non-migrants. Similarly, in the bar-tailed godwit (a synchronous, long-jump migrant), plasma CK activity was highest immediately after arrival from a 4000–5000km flight from West Africa to The Netherlands, and declined before departure for the arctic breeding areas. Late-arriving godwits had higher plasma CK activity than birds that had been at the stopover site longer. Juvenile western sandpipers making their first southward migration had higher plasma CK activity than adults. These results indicate that muscle damage occurs during migration, and that it is exacerbated in young, relatively untrained birds. However, the magnitude of the increases in plasma CK activity associated with migratory flight were relatively small, suggesting that the level of muscle damage is moderate. Migrants may avoid damage behaviourally, or have efficient biochemical and physiological defences against muscle injury.
format Text
author Guglielmo, Christopher G.
Piersma, Theunis
Williams, Tony D.
author_facet Guglielmo, Christopher G.
Piersma, Theunis
Williams, Tony D.
author_sort Guglielmo, Christopher G.
title A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
title_short A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
title_full A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
title_fullStr A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
title_full_unstemmed A sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
title_sort sport-physiological perspective on bird migration: evidence for flight-induced muscle damage
publisher Company of Biologists
publishDate 2001
url http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/204/15/2683
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/204/15/2683
op_rights Copyright (C) 2001, Company of Biologists
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