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Corticosterone implants make stress hyporesponsive birds
Author(s) -
Fernando TorresMedina,
Sonia Cabezas,
Tracy A. Marchant,
Martin Wikelski,
L. Michael Romero,
Michaela Hau,
Martina Carrete,
José L. Tella,
Julio Blas
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of experimental biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.367
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1477-9145
pISSN - 0022-0949
DOI - 10.1242/jeb.173864
Subject(s) - corticosterone , endocrinology , stress (linguistics) , medicine , biology , zoology , anatomy , hormone , philosophy , linguistics
In birds, the use of corticosterone (Cort) implants is a frequent tool aimed at simulating systemic elevations of this hormone and studying effects on biological traits (e.g. physiology, morphology, behavior). This manipulation may alter adrenocortical function, potentially changing both baseline (Cor BAS ) and stress-induced (Cor STRESS ) plasma Cort levels. However, implant effects on the latter trait are rarely measured, disregarding downstream consequences of potentially altered stress responses. Here, we analyzed the effects of Cort implants on both Cor BAS and Cor STRESS in nestling and adult European white storks, Ciconia ciconia In addition, we performed a review of 50 studies using Cort implants in birds during the last two decades to contextualize stork results, assess researchers' patterns of use and infer current study biases. High and low doses of Cort implants resulted in a decrease of both Cor BAS (31-71% below controls) and Cor STRESS (63-79% below controls) in storks. Our literature review revealed that Cor BAS generally increases (72% of experiments) whereas Cor STRESS decreases (78% of experiments) following implant treatment in birds. Our results challenge and expand the prevailing assumption that Cort implants increase circulating Cor BAS levels because: (i) Cor BAS levels show a quadratic association with implant dose across bird species, and decreased levels may occur at both high and low implant doses, and (ii) Cort implants also decrease Cor STRESS levels, thus producing stress-hyporesponsive phenotypes. It is time to work towards a better understanding of the effects of Cort implants on adrenocortical function, before addressing downstream links to variation in other biological traits.

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