eLife (Dec 2020)

The energy savings-oxidative cost trade-off for migratory birds during endurance flight

  • Scott McWilliams,
  • Barbara Pierce,
  • Andrea Wittenzellner,
  • Lillie Langlois,
  • Sophia Engel,
  • John R Speakman,
  • Olivia Fatica,
  • Kristen DeMoranville,
  • Wolfgang Goymann,
  • Lisa Trost,
  • Amadeusz Bryla,
  • Maciej Dzialo,
  • Edyta Sadowska,
  • Ulf Bauchinger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.60626
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Elite human and animal athletes must acquire the fuels necessary for extreme feats, but also contend with the oxidative damage associated with peak metabolic performance. Here, we show that a migratory bird with fuel stores composed of more omega-6 polyunsaturated fats (PUFA) expended 11% less energy during long-duration (6 hr) flights with no change in oxidative costs; however, this short-term energy savings came at the long-term cost of higher oxidative damage in the omega-6 PUFA-fed birds. Given that fatty acids are primary fuels, key signaling molecules, the building blocks of cell membranes, and that oxidative damage has long-term consequences for health and ageing, the energy savings-oxidative cost trade-off demonstrated here may be fundamentally important for a wide diversity of organisms on earth.

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