Love Ashley C, Lovern Matthew B, DuRant Sarah E
Department of Integrative Biology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA.
Department of Integrative Biology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA.
Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2017 Oct 1;252:18-26. doi: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2017.07.014. Epub 2017 Jul 18.
Studies using wild animals in laboratory-based research require bringing wild-captured organisms into a novel setting, which can have long-lasting impacts on physiology and behavior. In several species, captivity stimulates stress hormone production and can alter immune function. Despite this, there is little consensus on how captivity influences stress hormone regulation, or if captivity-induced changes in stress hormone production and regulation mediate changes in immune function. In this study, we investigate the influence of captivity on the physiology of a wild bird commonly-used in laboratory-based research, the house sparrow (Passer domesticus). We tested how captivity influences stress endocrinology, immune responses, and organ mass, and also investigated if the production or regulation of corticosterone, the main stress hormone in birds, correlated with changes in immunity. We found that baseline corticosterone concentrations and maximum capacity of the adrenals to secrete corticosterone increase following captivity and remain elevated after 9weeks of captivity. A measure of innate immune function, the bactericidal ability of plasma, also increased with time spent in captivity. Wound healing was also influenced by time spent in captivity, with birds taking almost 2days longer to heal if they were wounded after 3weeks in captivity when compared with birds that were wounded immediately upon capture. Additionally, captivity caused notable reductions in spleen and liver mass. Together, these results imply that captivity can have long-lasting effects on house sparrow corticosterone release and immune function, and suggest that even after 9weeks house sparrows do not acclimate physiologically to life in captivity.
在基于实验室的研究中使用野生动物,需要将野外捕获的生物置于一个新环境中,这可能会对其生理和行为产生长期影响。在多个物种中,圈养会刺激应激激素的产生,并可能改变免疫功能。尽管如此,对于圈养如何影响应激激素调节,或者圈养引起的应激激素产生和调节变化是否介导免疫功能变化,人们几乎没有达成共识。在本研究中,我们调查了圈养对一种常用于基于实验室研究的野生鸟类——家麻雀(Passer domesticus)生理的影响。我们测试了圈养如何影响应激内分泌学、免疫反应和器官质量,还研究了鸟类主要应激激素皮质酮的产生或调节是否与免疫变化相关。我们发现,圈养后基线皮质酮浓度和肾上腺分泌皮质酮的最大能力会增加,并且在圈养9周后仍保持升高。一项先天免疫功能指标,即血浆杀菌能力,也随着圈养时间的增加而增强。伤口愈合也受到圈养时间的影响,如果鸟类在圈养3周后受伤,与捕获后立即受伤的鸟类相比,它们的伤口愈合时间几乎要长2天。此外,圈养导致脾脏和肝脏质量显著减少。总之,这些结果表明圈养会对家麻雀的皮质酮释放和免疫功能产生长期影响,并表明即使在9周后,家麻雀在生理上也没有适应圈养生活。