Article

Food insecurity increases energetic efficiency, not food consumption: an exploratory study in European starlings

Details

Citation

Bateson M, Andrews C, Dunn J, Egger CB, Gray F, Mchugh M & Nettle D (2021) Food insecurity increases energetic efficiency, not food consumption: an exploratory study in European starlings. PeerJ, 9, Art. No.: e11541. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11541

Abstract
Food insecurity—defined as limited or unpredictable access to nutritionally adequate food—is associated with higher body mass in humans and birds. It is widely assumed that food insecurity-induced fattening is caused by increased food consumption, but there is little evidence supporting this in any species. We developed a novel technology for measuring foraging, food intake and body mass in small groups of aviary-housed European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris). Across four exploratory experiments, we demonstrate that birds responded to 1–2 weeks of food insecurity by increasing their body mass despite eating less. Food-insecure birds therefore increased their energetic efficiency, calculated as the body mass maintained per unit of food consumed. Mass gain was greater in birds that were lighter at baseline and in birds that faced greater competition for access to food. Whilst there was variation between experiments in mass gain and food consumption under food insecurity, energetic efficiency always increased. Bomb calorimetry of guano showed reduced energy density under food insecurity, suggesting that the energy assimilated from food increased. Behavioural observations of roosting showed inconsistent evidence for reduced physical activity under food insecurity. Increased energetic efficiency continued for 1–2 weeks after food security was reinstated, indicating an asymmetry in the speed of the response to food insecurity and the recovery from it. Future work to understand the mechanisms underlying food insecurity-induced mass gain should focus on the biological changes mediating increased energetic efficiency rather than increased energy consumption.

Keywords
Food insecurity; Insurance hypothesis; Unpredictable food; Obesity; Overweight; Energy balance; Food consumption; Starvation risk; Starling

Journal
PeerJ: Volume 9

StatusPublished
FundersBiotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and European Research Council Advanced Grant to Daniel Nettle under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
Publication date28/05/2021
Publication date online28/05/2021
Date accepted by journal10/05/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32682
PublisherPeerJ
eISSN2167-8359

People (1)

Dr Clare Andrews

Dr Clare Andrews

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology