Abstract
The effects of environmental perturbations or stressors on individual states can be carried over to subsequent life stages and ultimately affect survival and reproduction. The concentration of corticosterone (CORT) in feathers is an integrated measure of hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal activity during the molting period, providing information on the total baseline and stress-induced CORT secreted during the period of feather growth. Common eiders and greater snow geese replace all flight feathers once a year during the pre-basic molt, which occurs following breeding. Thus, CORT contained in feathers of pre-breeding individuals sampled in spring reflects the total CORT secreted during the previous molting event, which may provide insight into the magnitude or extent of stress experienced during this time period. We used data from multiple recaptures to disentangle the contribution of individual quality vs. external factors (i.e., breeding investment or environmental conditions) on feather CORT in arctic-nesting waterfowl. Our results revealed no repeatability of feather CORT within individuals of either species. In common eiders, feather CORT was not affected by prior reproductive investment, nor by pre-breeding (spring) body condition prior to the molting period. Individual feather CORT greatly varied according to the year, and August-September temperatures explained most of the annual variation in feather CORT. Understanding mechanisms that affect energetic costs and stress responses during molting will require further studies either using long-term data or experiments. Although our study period encompassed only five years, it nonetheless provides evidence that CORT measured in feathers likely reflects responses to environmental conditions experienced by birds during molt, and could be used as a metric to study carry-over effects.
Highlights
Hormones play an essential role in the study of life-history trade-offs because they link environmental condition and phenotypic expression [1]
Feather CORT is an integrated measure of the stress responses and energetic demands experienced by an individual during the period of feather growth [6,52]
Repeatability of stressinduced plasma CORT was observed in Adelie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) [53] and in female but not male Zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata) [54]
Summary
Hormones play an essential role in the study of life-history trade-offs because they link environmental condition and phenotypic expression [1]. CORT measured in feathers are not affected by capture when a fully grown feather is collected, and incorporate the amplitude and duration of all CORT secreted during the period of feather growth, and represent an integrated measure of both baseline and stress-induced CORT secretion during the molt period [6]. This technique is relatively recent, and an understanding of the information conveyed by feather CORT in wild populations is only beginning to be unravelled [7,8,9]
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