Resumen:
Physiology of free-living wild animals is often difficult to study in ecological/environmental monitoring contexts as it frequently requires invasive methods that involve capture and handling of individuals that can interfere in their physiology, stress, and behaviour. Infrared thermography (IRT) is a non-contact and non-invasive methodology that allows the remote measurement of body surface temperature. This individual physiological trait responds to ecological stressors and has been suggested to have potential as a non-invasive indicator of environmental stress in wild populations. In this study, we investigate the utility, efficiency, and reliability of IRT measurement in wild animals as a non-invasive tool for collecting physiological responses at scales and in data quantities needed to study ecological questions and to extend studies of thermal biology to explore population level differences. We used IRT to record eye region temperature in wild, free-ranging house sparrows while they visited feeders (n=130). We found the eye region temperature recorded during the first 3 seconds after the arrival to the feeder, which we define as baseline eye region temperature, consistently predicted the te...