Jesse S. Krause , Jonathan H. Pérez , Simone L. Meddle , John C. Wingfield
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引用次数: 26
Abstract
For wild free-living animals the availability of food resources can be greatly affected by environmental perturbations such as weather events. In response to environmental perturbations, animals activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis to adjust physiology and behavior. The literature asserts that during weather events food intake declines leading to changes in HPA axis activity, as measured by both baseline and stress-induced glucocorticoid concentrations. Here we investigated how body condition, locomotor activity, and stress physiology were affected by varying lengths of a fast (1, 2, 6, and 24 h; similar to that experienced by free-living birds) compared to when food was provided ad libitum in captive wintering male white-crowned sparrows, Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelii, exposed to a short day photoperiod. Baseline corticosterone concentrations were increased for all fasting durations but were highest in 6 and 24 h fasted birds. Stress-induced corticosterone was elevated in 1 h fasted birds with a trend for the 2 h of fast; no other differences were found. Baseline corticosterone concentrations were negatively related to both total fat scores and body mass. All birds lost body mass regardless of fast length but birds fasted for 24 h lost the most. Fat scores declined in the 6 and 24 h groups, and no measureable changes were detected in pectoralis muscle profile. Locomotor activity was increased over the entire period in which food was removed regardless of fasting duration. Together this suggests that reduced food availability is responsible, at least in part, for the rapid elevation both baseline corticosterone under any duration of fast and stress-induced concentrations during short-term fasts.
Samuel Kyei, Rexford Kwasi Gyaami, John Baptist Abowine, Ebenezer Zaabaar, Augustine Nti, Kofi Asiedu, Samuel Bert Boadi-Kusi, Bismark Owusu-Afriyie, Frank Assiamah, Anthony Armah
S. Kyei, Rexford Kwasi Gyaami, John Baptist Vianney Abowine, Ebenezer Zaabaar, Augustine Nti, Kofi Fred Asiedu, S. Boadi-Kusi, Bismark Owusu-Afriyie, Frank Assiamah, Anthony Armah
期刊介绍:
Physiology & Behavior is aimed at the causal physiological mechanisms of behavior and its modulation by environmental factors. The journal invites original reports in the broad area of behavioral and cognitive neuroscience, in which at least one variable is physiological and the primary emphasis and theoretical context are behavioral. The range of subjects includes behavioral neuroendocrinology, psychoneuroimmunology, learning and memory, ingestion, social behavior, and studies related to the mechanisms of psychopathology. Contemporary reviews and theoretical articles are welcomed and the Editors invite such proposals from interested authors.