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Evolutionary biology presumes that organ capacities match their natural loads. Therefore, organ systems are expected to show a reversible, repeatable and rapid phenotypic response to fluctuating conditions that is directional and scaled. In this study, phenotypic responses of the gizzard of adult Japanese quails Coturnix japonica to experimental mismatches of load and capacity were tested by a series of diet-switching experiments (involving an increased content of non-digestable fibre, NDF, in the diet). The results of all experiments were in accordance with the predictions made from the hypothesis that there is matching between loads and capacities: (1) the observed phenotypic responses are directional and scaled to the demands, i.e. increasing NDF elicits an increase in gizzard size. When the proportion of NDF in the diet was raised from 1 % to 45%, the gizzard was more than twice as large as in the control group; (2) size responses were reversible, and reduced NDF was followed by a decrease of gizzard size; (3) phenotypic responses could be elicited repeatedly in three successive trials; (4) excess capacities were down-regulated and insufficient capacities were up-regulated; (5) the responses followed changes of loads with almost no time lag, with size changes measurable within 24 hours.
Shorebirds show large interspecific variation in the relative size of the stomach, and especially of the muscular part, the gizzard. Much of this variation can be explained by their diet. Species feeding mainly on hard-shelled prey such as bivalves and gastropods have large stomachs; those feeding on soft-bodied prey such as worms have small stomachs. Within a species, diet- and migration-induced changes in stomach size can occur. Our studies on this intraspecific variation have focused on two mollusc-specialists, the Red Knot Calidris canutus and the Great Knot C. tenuirostris. Both are renowned for long-range flights between their arctic or sub-arctic alpine breeding grounds and a variety of coastal wetlands. Feeding mainly on shellfish ingested whole, both knot species have large stomachs, but changing diets easily lead to apparently adaptive modifications. In addition, the demands imposed by flights of many thousand kilometres may induce reductions in stomach size. Using ultrasonography we have begun to experimentally disentangle the causal relationships between diet, season and stomach size in Red Knots. A soft diet can induce stomach reductions of 50% within a week, and such changes are reversible. Studies on radiomarked birds in the Wadden Sea emphasize that variations in stomach size are correlated with prey and patch choice in the field.
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