Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?

Columba livia, original from Europe, is at present widely distributed all over the world. These granivores colonized urban environments where the availability of crops and seeds is not always permanent and, for that are forced to exploit other resources with different composition, e.g. high protein...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: CIMINARI,MARÍA EUGENIA, DEL VALLE MOYANO,GRACIELA, CHEDIACK,JUAN GABRIEL, CAVIEDES-VIDAL,ENRIQUE
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sociedad de Biología de Chile 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2005000200011
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:scielo:S0716-078X2005000200011
record_format dspace
spelling oai:scielo:S0716-078X20050002000112014-08-12Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?CIMINARI,MARÍA EUGENIADEL VALLE MOYANO,GRACIELACHEDIACK,JUAN GABRIELCAVIEDES-VIDAL,ENRIQUE feral pigeons dietary flexibility digestive plasticity intestinal enzymes pancreatic enzymes Columba livia, original from Europe, is at present widely distributed all over the world. These granivores colonized urban environments where the availability of crops and seeds is not always permanent and, for that are forced to exploit other resources with different composition, e.g. high protein foodstuff. Thus, feral pigeons should have the ability to survive on a diet rich in protein as they do with starchy items by having an adequate digestive biochemical machinery to process it. Phylogenetical and functional hypothesis has been proposed linking dietary flexibility and enzyme lability. All Passeriformes studied to date show the expected positive correlation between aminopeptidase-N and dietary protein but not for intestinal carbohydrases. Conversely, all the non-passerine species modulate intestinal carbohydrases, but not peptidases. Moreover, different scenarios may be posed as the output of a phylogenetical effect, e.g., adding constraints to a lability scheme in certain groups or just determining it (e.g., intestinal disaccharidases modulated in Galloanserae and peptidases modulated in Passeriformes). Consequently, we tested the prediction that feral pigeons adjust digestive enzyme activities according to the level of the respective substrate (e.g., carbohydrates, protein) in the diet. Birds were fed for 15 days with two different diets, one with high protein content (low in starch) (HP) and the other rich in starch and low in proteins (HS). Pigeons fed on the HP were able to survive with no other dietary supplement, as predicted. Pancreatic enzymes did not change between diet treatments. Birds fed on HP exhibited the predicted upward modulation of aminopeptidase-N activity, when compared to birds on HS, while intestinal carbohydrases did not show differences between diets. These results give an apparent support to the functional hypothesis, but are not enough to reject that the observed intestinal protease lability has a phylogenetical component, because feral pigeons are closely related to Passeriformes. Finally, feral pigeons have the ability to take full advantage of the energy content from proteins, having enough pancreatic proteases activity and modulating the intestinal aminopeptidase-N. These abilities may allow them to use effectively the nutrients found in the cities surviving even when grains are not available along the yearinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad de Biología de ChileRevista chilena de historia natural v.78 n.2 20052005-01-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2005000200011en10.4067/S0716-078X2005000200011
institution Scielo Chile
collection Scielo Chile
language English
topic feral pigeons
dietary flexibility
digestive plasticity
intestinal enzymes
pancreatic enzymes
spellingShingle feral pigeons
dietary flexibility
digestive plasticity
intestinal enzymes
pancreatic enzymes
CIMINARI,MARÍA EUGENIA
DEL VALLE MOYANO,GRACIELA
CHEDIACK,JUAN GABRIEL
CAVIEDES-VIDAL,ENRIQUE
Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
description Columba livia, original from Europe, is at present widely distributed all over the world. These granivores colonized urban environments where the availability of crops and seeds is not always permanent and, for that are forced to exploit other resources with different composition, e.g. high protein foodstuff. Thus, feral pigeons should have the ability to survive on a diet rich in protein as they do with starchy items by having an adequate digestive biochemical machinery to process it. Phylogenetical and functional hypothesis has been proposed linking dietary flexibility and enzyme lability. All Passeriformes studied to date show the expected positive correlation between aminopeptidase-N and dietary protein but not for intestinal carbohydrases. Conversely, all the non-passerine species modulate intestinal carbohydrases, but not peptidases. Moreover, different scenarios may be posed as the output of a phylogenetical effect, e.g., adding constraints to a lability scheme in certain groups or just determining it (e.g., intestinal disaccharidases modulated in Galloanserae and peptidases modulated in Passeriformes). Consequently, we tested the prediction that feral pigeons adjust digestive enzyme activities according to the level of the respective substrate (e.g., carbohydrates, protein) in the diet. Birds were fed for 15 days with two different diets, one with high protein content (low in starch) (HP) and the other rich in starch and low in proteins (HS). Pigeons fed on the HP were able to survive with no other dietary supplement, as predicted. Pancreatic enzymes did not change between diet treatments. Birds fed on HP exhibited the predicted upward modulation of aminopeptidase-N activity, when compared to birds on HS, while intestinal carbohydrases did not show differences between diets. These results give an apparent support to the functional hypothesis, but are not enough to reject that the observed intestinal protease lability has a phylogenetical component, because feral pigeons are closely related to Passeriformes. Finally, feral pigeons have the ability to take full advantage of the energy content from proteins, having enough pancreatic proteases activity and modulating the intestinal aminopeptidase-N. These abilities may allow them to use effectively the nutrients found in the cities surviving even when grains are not available along the year
author CIMINARI,MARÍA EUGENIA
DEL VALLE MOYANO,GRACIELA
CHEDIACK,JUAN GABRIEL
CAVIEDES-VIDAL,ENRIQUE
author_facet CIMINARI,MARÍA EUGENIA
DEL VALLE MOYANO,GRACIELA
CHEDIACK,JUAN GABRIEL
CAVIEDES-VIDAL,ENRIQUE
author_sort CIMINARI,MARÍA EUGENIA
title Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
title_short Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
title_full Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
title_fullStr Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
title_full_unstemmed Feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
title_sort feral pigeons in urban environments: dietary flexibility and enzymatic digestion?
publisher Sociedad de Biología de Chile
publishDate 2005
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-078X2005000200011
work_keys_str_mv AT ciminarimariaeugenia feralpigeonsinurbanenvironmentsdietaryflexibilityandenzymaticdigestion
AT delvallemoyanograciela feralpigeonsinurbanenvironmentsdietaryflexibilityandenzymaticdigestion
AT chediackjuangabriel feralpigeonsinurbanenvironmentsdietaryflexibilityandenzymaticdigestion
AT caviedesvidalenrique feralpigeonsinurbanenvironmentsdietaryflexibilityandenzymaticdigestion
_version_ 1718439574488743936