Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA; Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Horm Behav. 2013 Aug;64(3):566-72. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2013.07.008. Epub 2013 Aug 6.
The social environment in which an animal lives can profoundly impact its physiology, including glucocorticoid (GC) responses to external stressors. In social, group-living species, individuals may face stressors arising from regular interactions with conspecifics as well as those associated with basic life history needs such as acquiring food or shelter. To explore the relative contributions of these two types of stressors on glucocorticoid physiology in a communally breeding mammal, we characterized baseline GC levels in female colonial tuco-tucos (Ctenomys sociabilis), which are subterranean rodents endemic to southwestern Argentina. Long-term field studies have revealed that while about half of all yearling female C. sociabilis live and breed alone, the remainder live and breed within their natal group. We assessed the effects of this intraspecific variation in social environment on GC physiology by comparing concentrations of baseline fecal corticosterone metabolite (fCM) for (1) lone and group-living yearling females in a free-living population of C. sociabilis and (2) captive yearling female C. sociabilis that had been experimentally assigned to live alone or with conspecifics. In both cases, lone females displayed significantly higher mean baseline fCM concentrations. Data from free-living animals indicated that this outcome arose from differences in circadian patterns of GC production. fCM concentrations for group-living animals declined in the afternoon while fCM in lone individuals did not. These findings suggest that for C. sociabilis, stressors associated with basic life history functions present greater challenges than those arising from interactions with conspecifics. Our study is one of the first to examine GC levels in a plural-breeding mammal in which the effects of group-living are not confounded by differences in reproductive or dominance status, thereby generating important insights into the endocrine consequences of group-living.
动物生活的社会环境可以深刻影响其生理机能,包括对外部应激源的糖皮质激素(GC)反应。在具有社会行为、群体生活的物种中,个体可能会面临来自与同种个体的正常互动以及与获取食物或住所等基本生活史需求相关的应激源。为了探究这两种应激源对群居繁殖哺乳动物糖皮质激素生理机能的相对贡献,我们对生活在阿根廷西南部的穴居啮齿动物——多刺裸尾鼠(Ctenomys sociabilis)的雌性个体的基础 GC 水平进行了特征描述。长期的野外研究表明,虽然大约一半的一年生雌性多刺裸尾鼠独自生活和繁殖,但其余的则在其出生地群体中生活和繁殖。我们通过比较自由生活的多刺裸尾鼠群体中(1)独自生活和群体生活的一年生雌性个体以及(2)被单独或与同种个体一起饲养的圈养一年生雌性个体的基础粪便皮质甾酮代谢物(fCM)浓度,来评估这种种内社会环境变化对 GC 生理机能的影响。在这两种情况下,独居雌性的平均基础 fCM 浓度都显著更高。来自自由生活动物的数据表明,这种结果是由于 GC 产生的昼夜节律模式的差异造成的。群体生活动物的 fCM 浓度在下午下降,而独居个体的 fCM 浓度则没有下降。这些发现表明,对于多刺裸尾鼠来说,与基本生活史功能相关的应激源比与同种个体相互作用所带来的应激源更具挑战性。我们的研究是首次在多胎繁殖的哺乳动物中检查 GC 水平的研究之一,其中群居的影响不会因生殖或支配地位的差异而混淆,从而为群居生活的内分泌后果提供了重要的见解。