Abstract
Animals can respond physiologically, such as by adjusting glucocorticoid hormone concentrations, to sudden environmental challenges. These physiological changes can then affect behavioural and cognitive responses. While the relationships between adrenocortical activity and behaviour and cognition are well documented, results are equivocal, suggesting species-specific responses. We investigated whether adrenocortical activity, measured using corticosterone metabolite concentration, was related to problem solving in an Australian rodent, the fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rat (Melomys cervinipes). Mosaic-tailed rats live in complex environments that are prone to disturbance, suggesting a potential need to solve novel problems, and have been found to show relationships between physiology and other behaviours. We measured problem solving using five food-baited puzzles (matchbox and cylinder in the home cage, and activity board with pillars to push, tiles to slide and levers to lift in an open field), and an escape-motivated obstruction task in a light/dark box. Faecal samples were collected from individuals during routine cage cleaning. Adrenocortical activity was evaluated non-invasively by measuring faecal corticosterone metabolites using an enzyme immunoassay, which was biochemically and biologically validated. Despite varying over time, adrenocortical activity was not significantly related to problem solving success or time spent interacting for any task. However, as adrenocortical activity is reflective of multiple physiological processes, including stress and metabolism, future studies should consider how other measures of physiology are also linked to problem solving.
Highlights
Throughout an animal’s life, it will experience changes in its immediate environment
Adrenocortical activity could indicate an animal’s stress levels, as glucocorticoids are released after various stressors [5]
As adrenocortical activity could reflect variations in metabolism [10] or stress [11], both of which are known to impact behaviour [7,27] and cognition [28], we predicted that individual variation in adrenocortical activity would reflect individual variation in problem solving ability, but due to mixed results (e.g., [21,22]), we made no a priori predictions about the direction of this relationship
Summary
Throughout an animal’s life, it will experience changes in its immediate environment. Individual variation in problem solving is well documented in many species, often due to underlying individual differences in motor skills, personality and/or cognitive ability [17] Physiological responses, such as adrenocortical activity, could contribute to individual differences in problem solving [18]. Horses (Equus callabus) that were capable of innovating had significantly higher corticosterone concentrations than horses that did not innovate [21], and blood glucose and ketone concentrations were not related to problem solving in African striped mice (Rhabdomys pumilio) [22] This suggests that the relationship between adrenocortical activity and problem solving may be species-specific, and that the methods of measuring this response could impact the results. As adrenocortical activity could reflect variations in metabolism [10] or stress [11], both of which are known to impact behaviour [7,27] and cognition [28], we predicted that individual variation in adrenocortical activity would reflect individual variation in problem solving ability, but due to mixed results (e.g., [21,22]), we made no a priori predictions about the direction of this relationship
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