Hing Stephanie, Narayan Edward, Thompson R C Andrew, Godfrey Stephanie
School of Veterinary and Life Sciences, Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA 6150, Australia.
Environmental Futures Research Institute, Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Southport, QLD 4222, Australia.
Conserv Physiol. 2014 Jul 23;2(1):cou027. doi: 10.1093/conphys/cou027. eCollection 2014.
Many Australian marsupials are threatened species. In order to manage in situ and ex situ populations effectively, it is important to understand how marsupials respond to threats. Stress physiology (the study of the response of animals to challenging stimuli), a key approach in conservation physiology, can be used to characterize the physiological response of wildlife to threats. We reviewed the literature on the measurement of glucocorticoids (GCs), endocrine indicators of stress, in order to understand the stress response to conservation-relevant stressors in Australian marsupials and identified 29 studies. These studies employed a range of methods to measure GCs, with faecal glucocorticoid metabolite enzyme immunoassay being the most common method. The main stressors considered in studies of marsupials were capture and handling. To date, the benefits of stress physiology have yet to be harnessed fully in marsupial conservation. Despite a theoretical base dating back to the 1960s, GCs have only been used to understand how 21 of the 142 extant species of Australian marsupial respond to stressors. These studies include merely six of the 60 marsupial species of conservation concern (IUCN Near Threatened to Critically Endangered). Furthermore, the fitness consequences of stress for Australian marsupials are rarely examined. Individual and species differences in the physiological stress response also require further investigation, because significant species-specific variations in GC levels in response to stressors can shed light on why some individuals or species are more vulnerable to stress factors while others appear more resilient. This review summarizes trends, knowledge gaps and future research directions for stress physiology research in Australian marsupial conservation.
许多澳大利亚有袋类动物都是濒危物种。为了有效管理其原地和迁地种群,了解有袋类动物如何应对威胁至关重要。应激生理学(研究动物对挑战性刺激的反应)是保护生理学的关键方法,可用于描述野生动物对威胁的生理反应。我们回顾了关于糖皮质激素(GCs,应激的内分泌指标)测量的文献,以了解澳大利亚有袋类动物对与保护相关应激源的应激反应,并确定了29项研究。这些研究采用了一系列方法来测量GCs,其中粪便糖皮质激素代谢产物酶免疫测定法是最常用的方法。有袋类动物研究中考虑的主要应激源是捕捉和处理。迄今为止,应激生理学的益处尚未在有袋类动物保护中得到充分利用。尽管其理论基础可追溯到20世纪60年代,但GCs仅被用于了解澳大利亚142种现存有袋类动物中的21种对应激源的反应。这些研究仅包括60种受保护关注的有袋类动物(世界自然保护联盟近危至极度濒危)中的6种。此外,很少研究应激对澳大利亚有袋类动物健康的影响。生理应激反应中的个体和物种差异也需要进一步研究,因为对应激源的GC水平存在显著的物种特异性差异,可以揭示为什么有些个体或物种更容易受到应激因素的影响,而其他个体或物种则显得更具恢复力。本综述总结了澳大利亚有袋类动物保护中应激生理学研究的趋势、知识空白和未来研究方向。