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The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos

BACKGROUND: Providing the context for the evolution of life-history traits, habitat features constrain successful ecological and physiological strategies. In vertebrates, a key response to life’s challenges is the activation of the Stress (HPA) and Gonadal (HPG) axes. Much of the interest in stress...

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Autores principales: Ovejero Aguilar, Ramiro J.A., Jahn, Graciela A., Soto-Gamboa, Mauricio, Novaro, Andrés J., Carmanchahi, Pablo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5101617/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27833807
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2640
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author Ovejero Aguilar, Ramiro J.A.
Jahn, Graciela A.
Soto-Gamboa, Mauricio
Novaro, Andrés J.
Carmanchahi, Pablo
author_facet Ovejero Aguilar, Ramiro J.A.
Jahn, Graciela A.
Soto-Gamboa, Mauricio
Novaro, Andrés J.
Carmanchahi, Pablo
author_sort Ovejero Aguilar, Ramiro J.A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Providing the context for the evolution of life-history traits, habitat features constrain successful ecological and physiological strategies. In vertebrates, a key response to life’s challenges is the activation of the Stress (HPA) and Gonadal (HPG) axes. Much of the interest in stress ecology is motivated by the desire to understand the physiological mechanisms in which the environment affects fitness. As reported in the literature, several intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect variability in hormone levels. In both social and non-social animals, the frequency and type of interaction with conspecifics, as well as the status in social species, can affect HPA axis activity, resulting in changes in the reproductive success of animals. We predicted that a social environment can affect both guanaco axes by increasing the secretion of testosterone (T) and Glucocorticoid (GCs) in response to individual social interactions and the energetic demands of breeding. Assuming that prolonged elevated levels of GCs over time can be harmful to individuals, it is predicted that the HPA axis suppresses the HPG axis and causes T levels to decrease, as GCs increase. METHODS: All of the data for individuals were collected by non-invasive methods (fecal samples) to address hormonal activities. This is a novel approach in physiological ecology because feces are easily obtained through non-invasive sampling in animal populations. RESULTS: As expected, there was a marked adrenal (p-value = .3.4e−12) and gonadal (p-value = 0.002656) response due to seasonal variation in Lama guanicoe. No significant differences were found in fecal GCs metabolites between males/females*season for the entire study period (p-value = 0.2839). Despite the seasonal activity variation in the hormonal profiles, our results show a positive correlation (p-value = 1.952e−11, COR = 0.50) between the adrenal and gonadal system. The marked endocrine (r(2) = 0.806) and gonad (r(2) = 0.7231) response due to seasonal variation in male guanaco individuals highlights the individual’s energetic demands according to life-history strategies. This is a remarkable result because no inhibition was found between the axes as theory suggests. Finally, the dataset was used to build a reactive scope model for guanacos. DISCUSSION: Guanacos cope with the trade-off between sociability and reproductive benefits and costs, by regulating their GCs and T levels on a seasonal basis, suggesting an adaptive role of both axes to different habitat pressures. The results presented here highlight the functional role of stress and gonad axes on a critical phase of a male mammal’s life—the mating period—when all of the resources are at the disposal of the male and must be used to maximize the chances for reproductive success.
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spelling pubmed-51016172016-11-10 The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos Ovejero Aguilar, Ramiro J.A. Jahn, Graciela A. Soto-Gamboa, Mauricio Novaro, Andrés J. Carmanchahi, Pablo PeerJ Ecology BACKGROUND: Providing the context for the evolution of life-history traits, habitat features constrain successful ecological and physiological strategies. In vertebrates, a key response to life’s challenges is the activation of the Stress (HPA) and Gonadal (HPG) axes. Much of the interest in stress ecology is motivated by the desire to understand the physiological mechanisms in which the environment affects fitness. As reported in the literature, several intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect variability in hormone levels. In both social and non-social animals, the frequency and type of interaction with conspecifics, as well as the status in social species, can affect HPA axis activity, resulting in changes in the reproductive success of animals. We predicted that a social environment can affect both guanaco axes by increasing the secretion of testosterone (T) and Glucocorticoid (GCs) in response to individual social interactions and the energetic demands of breeding. Assuming that prolonged elevated levels of GCs over time can be harmful to individuals, it is predicted that the HPA axis suppresses the HPG axis and causes T levels to decrease, as GCs increase. METHODS: All of the data for individuals were collected by non-invasive methods (fecal samples) to address hormonal activities. This is a novel approach in physiological ecology because feces are easily obtained through non-invasive sampling in animal populations. RESULTS: As expected, there was a marked adrenal (p-value = .3.4e−12) and gonadal (p-value = 0.002656) response due to seasonal variation in Lama guanicoe. No significant differences were found in fecal GCs metabolites between males/females*season for the entire study period (p-value = 0.2839). Despite the seasonal activity variation in the hormonal profiles, our results show a positive correlation (p-value = 1.952e−11, COR = 0.50) between the adrenal and gonadal system. The marked endocrine (r(2) = 0.806) and gonad (r(2) = 0.7231) response due to seasonal variation in male guanaco individuals highlights the individual’s energetic demands according to life-history strategies. This is a remarkable result because no inhibition was found between the axes as theory suggests. Finally, the dataset was used to build a reactive scope model for guanacos. DISCUSSION: Guanacos cope with the trade-off between sociability and reproductive benefits and costs, by regulating their GCs and T levels on a seasonal basis, suggesting an adaptive role of both axes to different habitat pressures. The results presented here highlight the functional role of stress and gonad axes on a critical phase of a male mammal’s life—the mating period—when all of the resources are at the disposal of the male and must be used to maximize the chances for reproductive success. PeerJ Inc. 2016-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5101617/ /pubmed/27833807 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2640 Text en ©2016 Ovejero Aguilar et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Ecology
Ovejero Aguilar, Ramiro J.A.
Jahn, Graciela A.
Soto-Gamboa, Mauricio
Novaro, Andrés J.
Carmanchahi, Pablo
The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
title The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
title_full The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
title_fullStr The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
title_full_unstemmed The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
title_short The Ecology of Stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
title_sort ecology of stress: linking life-history traits with physiological control mechanisms in free-living guanacos
topic Ecology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5101617/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27833807
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2640
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