Most birds are homeothermic, normally maintaining their body temperature within a range of less than 1 °C (1.8 °F) by active metabolic means. However, some small birds are heterothermic, in that they allow their nocturnal body temperature to drop by as much as 10 °C (18 °F). In birds severe cooling induces shivering in particular muscles and causes cardiovascular and metabolic changes. In fact, there is little evidence of nonshivering thermogenesis (metabolic heat production) in adult birds, since birds do not have the heat-generating brown adipose tissue found in mammals.
Studies in the pigeon Columba livia have indicated that peripheral thermoreceptors mediate responses to cold. When C. livia was exposed to decreasing temperatures, dropping from 28 to −10 °C (82 to 14 °F), the animal’s core body and spinal cord temperatures increased, while its leg, neck, and back skin temperatures decreased. Furthermore, different skin areas of birds appear to have varying thermosensitivity. For example, in pigeons skin on the back is more sensitive to the detection of warmth than skin on the wings and breast. In addition, nonfeathered skin areas, such as the legs and feet, have little sensitivity to cold or warm stimuli. Many species of birds have a high degree of cold sensitivity, and thus, these species migrate to warm climates for the winter. In contrast, species that are cold-tolerant may migrate to avoid climates that become too warm. Many cold-tolerant birds adjust their basal metabolic rates to avoid hypothermy.
Investigations of thermoreception and thermoregulation in birds indicate that thermosensors exist not only in the skin on the body but also in the skin around the face, the thoracic brood patch (the area used for egg incubation), and the beak. Thermoreceptors also exist in the spinal cord and brainstem (though apparently not in the hypothalamus). Early studies employing microelectrodes provided evidence of cold-sensitive thermoreceptors in the tongues of chickens. Later molecular studies confirmed the presence of both cold-sensing TRPM channels and heat-sensing TRPV channels in the chicken Gallus gallus. As indicated above, there is electrophysiological evidence of cold and warm thermoreceptors in the skin of pigeons. There is also evidence that cold and warm thermoreceptors are present in the beaks of geese and ducks; some of these receptors may also be mechanoreceptive. There is direct physiological and behavioral evidence for thermoreceptors in the brood patch of hens. Such thermoreceptors are important for controlling incubating behaviour and for regulating blood flow in the brood patch. For example, in response to the temperature of the eggs, hens remain on the eggs for an appropriate length of time, and, by regulating blood flow, they can maintain the temperature of their brood patch, keeping this region warm and optimizing the development of the embryos in the incubating eggs. It is particularly striking that hens have impaired or absent incubation behaviour when the nerves to the brood patch have been cut; this suggests a critical role for thermoreceptors in incubation behaviour.
Megapodes, large-footed birds such as the Australian mallee fowl (genus Leipoa) and the brush turkey, have unique incubation behaviour that appears to rely heavily on thermoreception. They bury their eggs in mounds where heat is generated through the fermentation of rotting vegetation and by irradiation from the Sun. In order to keep the temperature of the eggs almost constant at 32–34 °C (90–93 °F) over the long incubation period (from 60 to 90 days), they repeatedly cover and uncover the eggs by moving the compost around the eggs with their mouths. This behaviour depends on thermoreceptors in and around their mouths and face to guide the success of their efforts.