Spatial and temporal dynamics of corticosterone and corticosterone binding globulin are driven by environmental heterogeneity |
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Authors: | Shultz Michael Todd Kitaysky Alexander Stanislav |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Artic Biology, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Department of Biology and Wildlife, 311 Irving 1, Fairbanks, AK 99775, USA. mts013@bucknell.edu |
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Abstract: | The question of whether changes in glucocorticoid concentrations reflect consistent changes in physiology associated with transitions between different stages of reproduction, or whether they reflect responses to environmental conditions, is one the central issues in field endocrinology studies. We examined the temporal and spatial dynamics of corticosterone (CORT, baseline, and acute stress-induced) and corticosterone binding globulin (CBG) concentrations in blood of Black-legged Kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) breeding at four major colonies in the Bering Sea, Alaska, during 1999-2005. We found that total CORT, free CORT, and CBG capacity varied inconsistently among reproductive stages, colonies, and years. Total CORT levels were positively correlated with CBG capacity. Variation in free CORT was largely driven by variation in total CORT. Results suggest that the adrenocortical function and CBG in breeding kittiwakes do not vary as a consequence of stage-specific modulation associated with a particular reproductive stage as in some short-lived passerine birds. Rather, in accord with predictions for a long-lived species, the lack of consistent colony, year, and reproductive stage patterns in baseline and maximum CORT, and CBG indicates that environmental factors, probably local dynamics of food availability, drive variation in these factors. |
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Keywords: | Kittiwake Stress Reproduction Glucocorticoids Ecology Food availability |
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