Abstract

Determination of fecal steroid metabolites is a noninvasive technique that characterizes the physiological state of organisms without the physiological and psychological stress of handling. Although this technique has many applications in the study of wildlife and/or captive animals without the necessity of capturing individuals, it requires a species-specific validation before use. A complete validation includes an analytical and a physiological one. In the latter changes in fecal hormone metabolites are induced by previous manipulations of the respective plasma hormones. Here we validated a method for measuring fecal cortisol metabolites (FCM) in the hystricomorph rodent Octodon degus. We extracted feces with 80% ethanol and quantified steroids using a commercial available cortisol radioimmunoassay. We first compared baseline levels of blood cortisol and FCM, and then performed a challenge test with adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) to demonstrate that FCM accurately reflect adrenocortical activity. We found a significantly positive relationship between concentrations of blood cortisol and its fecal metabolites. During the ACTH challenge test, blood cortisol levels peaked 30 min after injection, and FCM mirrored this peak with a delay of about 6 hr. Our successfully validated noninvasive method provides new opportunities for studies assessing the influence of social and ecological factors on degus under natural conditions.

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