Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, Graham Kerr Building, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ and School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews South Street, St Andrews KY16 9JP, UK.
Curr Biol. 2014 May 19;24(10):R408-12. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.04.017.
In his book on behavioural endocrinology, Randy Nelson describes 'stress' as a 'notoriously ethereal concept'. Yet, despite this lack of clarity, studies of the consequences of stress across different time scales, life history stages, taxa and levels of biological enquiry form a large part of modern biology and biomedicine. Organisms need to recognise and respond to environmental challenges. Being able to do so appropriately, and with minimal costs, is an important physiological attribute, with great adaptive value. The costs and benefits of different mechanisms that enable organisms to cope with unpredictable environmental changes can be manifest to different degrees at different life stages. Accordingly, the level of stress experienced in the environment can act as a strong selective pressure that drives the evolution of life histories.
在他关于行为内分泌学的书中,兰迪·纳尔逊(Randy Nelson)将“压力”描述为“一个非常难以捉摸的概念”。然而,尽管缺乏明确性,但在不同时间尺度、生活史阶段、分类群和生物研究层次上研究压力的后果,仍然构成了现代生物学和生物医学的重要组成部分。生物体需要识别和应对环境挑战。能够适当地做到这一点,并且代价最小,是一个重要的生理特征,具有巨大的适应价值。使生物体能够应对不可预测的环境变化的不同机制的成本和收益,在不同的生命阶段可能有不同程度的表现。因此,环境中经历的压力水平可以作为一种强大的选择压力,推动生命史的进化。