Sild Elin, Meitern Richard, Männiste Marju, Karu Ulvi, Hõrak Peeter
Department of Zoology, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, Tartu University, Vanemuise 46, 51014 Tartu, Estonia.
Department of Zoology, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, Tartu University, Vanemuise 46, 51014 Tartu, Estonia.
Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2014 Aug 1;204:203-10. doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2014.05.026. Epub 2014 Jun 2.
Differential exposure or sensitivity to stressors can have substantial effects on the variation in immune responsiveness of animals. However, the questions about the causes and consequences of these processes have remained largely unclear, particularly as regards wild animals and their natural pathogens. Here we ask how a potential marker of stress responses, the feather corticosterone (CORT) content, reflects the resistance to an experimental infection with natural coccidian parasites in wild-caught captive greenfinches (Carduelis chloris). CORT content of tail feathers grown in captivity correlated positively with a behavioural measure of captivity-intolerance, i.e., the amount of damage accrued to tail feathers in captivity that results from flapping against cage bars. This finding is consistent with an idea that feather CORT reflects the amount of stress experienced during feather growth. Experimental infection with heterologous coccidian strains increased feather CORT levels. Birds with highest feather CORT levels appeared most resistant to new infection, assessed on the basis of parasite oocyst shedding at the peak phase of infection. Birds with highest feather CORT levels also cleared the infection faster than the birds with lower feather CORT levels. These findings provide the first evidence about positive covariation between feather CORT and resistance to a natural pathogen in a wild bird species. Assuming that feather CORT levels reflect circulating hormone titres, these findings suggest that parasite-mediated selection may contribute to maintenance of phenotypes with high corticosterone responsiveness to stress, despite potential negative behavioural consequences.
对应激源的不同暴露或敏感性会对动物免疫反应性的变化产生重大影响。然而,关于这些过程的原因和后果的问题在很大程度上仍不明确,特别是对于野生动物及其天然病原体而言。在这里,我们研究应激反应的一个潜在标志物——羽毛皮质酮(CORT)含量,如何反映野生捕获的圈养绿翅金雀(Carduelis chloris)对自然球虫寄生虫实验性感染的抵抗力。圈养期间生长的尾羽的CORT含量与对圈养不耐受的行为指标呈正相关,即圈养期间因拍打笼条而导致尾羽累积的损伤量。这一发现与羽毛CORT反映羽毛生长期间所经历的应激量这一观点一致。用异源球虫菌株进行实验性感染会增加羽毛CORT水平。根据感染高峰期寄生虫卵囊排出情况评估,羽毛CORT水平最高的鸟类似乎对新感染的抵抗力最强。羽毛CORT水平最高的鸟类清除感染的速度也比羽毛CORT水平较低的鸟类更快。这些发现首次证明了野生鸟类物种中羽毛CORT与对天然病原体的抵抗力之间存在正协变关系。假设羽毛CORT水平反映循环激素滴度,这些发现表明,尽管可能存在负面行为后果,但寄生虫介导的选择可能有助于维持对应激具有高皮质酮反应性的表型。