Rakotoniaina Josué H, Kappeler Peter M, Kaesler Eva, Hämäläinen Anni M, Kirschbaum Clemens, Kraus Cornelia
Department of Sociobiology/Anthropology, Georg-August University of Göttingen, Kellnerweg 6, 37077, Göttingen, Germany.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Unit, Deutsches Primatenzentrum, Kellnerweg 4, 37077, Göttingen, Germany.
BMC Ecol. 2017 Sep 1;17(1):30. doi: 10.1186/s12898-017-0140-1.
Glucocorticoid hormones are known to play a key role in mediating a cascade of physiological responses to social and ecological stressors and can therefore influence animals' behaviour and ultimately fitness. Yet, how glucocorticoid levels are associated with reproductive success or survival in a natural setting has received little empirical attention so far. Here, we examined links between survival and levels of glucocorticoid in a small, short-lived primate, the grey mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus), using for the first time an indicator of long-term stress load (hair cortisol concentration). Using a capture-mark-recapture modelling approach, we assessed the effect of stress on survival in a broad context (semi-annual rates), but also under a specific period of high energetic demands during the reproductive season. We further assessed the power of other commonly used health indicators (body condition and parasitism) in predicting survival outcomes relative to the effect of long-term stress.
We found that high levels of hair cortisol were associated with reduced survival probabilities both at the semi-annual scale and over the reproductive season. Additionally, very good body condition (measured as scaled mass index) was related to increased survival at the semi-annual scale, but not during the breeding season. In contrast, variation in parasitism failed to predict survival.
Altogether, our results indicate that long-term increased glucocorticoid levels can be related to survival and hence population dynamics, and suggest differential strength of selection acting on glucocorticoids, body condition, and parasite infection.
已知糖皮质激素在介导动物对社会和生态应激源的一系列生理反应中起关键作用,因此可影响动物行为并最终影响其健康状况。然而,在自然环境中糖皮质激素水平如何与繁殖成功率或存活率相关,目前很少受到实证关注。在此,我们首次使用长期应激负荷指标(毛发皮质醇浓度),研究了小型短命灵长类动物灰鼠狐猴(Microcebus murinus)的存活率与糖皮质激素水平之间的联系。我们采用标记重捕建模方法,在广泛背景下(半年发生率)评估应激对存活率的影响,同时也评估繁殖季节能量需求高的特定时期的影响。我们还进一步评估了其他常用健康指标(身体状况和寄生虫感染)相对于长期应激影响在预测存活结果方面的作用。
我们发现,在半年尺度和整个繁殖季节,高毛发皮质醇水平均与较低的存活概率相关。此外,非常好的身体状况(以体重指数衡量)在半年尺度上与存活率增加有关,但在繁殖季节则不然。相比之下,寄生虫感染的变化未能预测存活率。
总体而言,我们的结果表明,长期升高的糖皮质激素水平可能与存活率以及种群动态有关,并表明自然选择对糖皮质激素、身体状况和寄生虫感染的作用强度存在差异。