Abstract
BackgroundGlucocorticoids are adrenal steroid hormones essential to homeostatic maintenance. Their daily variation at low concentrations regulates physiology and behavior to sustain proper immunological and metabolic function. Glucocorticoids rise well above these baseline levels during stress to elicit emergency-state responses that increase short-term survival. Despite this essence in managing life processes under both regular and adverse conditions, relationships of glucocorticoid release to environmental and intrinsic factors that vary at daily and seasonal scales are rarely studied in the wild.MethodsThis study on 41 passerine species of the Ecuadorian Chocó applied a standardized capture-and-restraint protocol to examine diurnal variation in baseline and stress-related release of corticosterone, the primary avian glucocorticoid. Tests for relationships to relative body mass, hemoglobin concentration, molt status and date complemented this evaluation of the time of day effect on corticosterone secretion in free-living tropical rainforest birds. Analyses were also partitioned by sex as well as performed separately on two common species, the wedge-billed woodcreeper and olive-striped flycatcher.ResultsInterspecific analyses indicated maximum baseline corticosterone levels at the onset of the active phase and reductions thereafter. Stress-related levels did not correspond to time of day but accompanied baseline reductions during molt and elevations in birds sampled later during the September - November study period. Baseline corticosterone related negatively to hemoglobin in the wedge-billed woodcreeper and stress-related levels increased with body mass in the olive-striped flycatcher. There were no substantial sex-related differences.ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest a diurnal rhythmicity in baseline corticosterone release so robust as to emerge in pooled analyses across a highly variable dataset. While this detection in nature is singular, correspondent patterns have been demonstrated outside of the tropics in captive model species. Congruity in daily rhythms and links to physiological and life-history state across disparate taxa and environments may promote the yet unresolved utility of corticosterone release as a global metric for population health. However, certain results of this study also deviate from laboratory and field research at higher latitudes, cautioning generalization. Environmental distinctions such as high productivity and tempered seasonality may precipitate unique life-history strategies and underlying hormonal mechanisms in tropical rainforest birds.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12983-016-0151-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Glucocorticoids are adrenal steroid hormones essential to homeostatic maintenance
Baseline corticosterone concentrations differed among sampling intervals (ANOVA, F3,89 = 4.427), with levels obtained from the first and second sampling intervals higher than those from the third and fourth intervals
In interspecific analysis partitioned by sex, the model selected for males retained the effect of these three predictors yet identified sampling date as a fourth explanatory variable (r2 = 0.49, F4,25 = 6.044), with individuals sampled later in the September - November study period yielding higher levels of baseline corticosterone
Summary
Glucocorticoids are adrenal steroid hormones essential to homeostatic maintenance Their daily variation at low concentrations regulates physiology and behavior to sustain proper immunological and metabolic function. Glucocorticoids rise well above these baseline levels during stress to elicit emergency-state responses that increase short-term survival. Despite this essence in managing life processes under both regular and adverse conditions, relationships of glucocorticoid release to environmental and intrinsic factors that vary at daily and seasonal scales are rarely studied in the wild. Diel rhythms in glucocorticoid activity have been established in mammals and are well characterized in rodent model species [4, 5]. Discord extends to data on modulation by environmental and intrinsic factors such as photoperiod (e.g. photoperiod-dependent adrenal sensitivity in house sparrows [8] vs. independent responses in starlings [13]) and physiological state (e.g. unexhausted [17] vs. maximally stimulated adrenal capacity to secrete corticosterone in molting house sparrows [8])
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