Island Living Indirectly Affects Hair Glucocorticoid Levels in a Small Mammal.

Ecological and evolutionary physiology Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-26 DOI:10.1086/732760
Nathan D Stewart, Joshua K R Tabh, Gabriela F Mastromonaco, Gary Burness
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Abstract

AbstractIsland vertebrates that are small on the mainland tend to be larger and exhibit tamer behavior than their mainland conspecifics-a combined set of characteristics known as "island syndrome." Such island-specific traits are often attributed to lower predation pressure on islands than on the mainland. While the morphology and behavior of island vertebrates has received significant attention, relatively few studies have compared physiological traits between island and mainland populations. Given that hormones such as glucocorticoids are involved in responding to predation, it is reasonable to test whether island populations that have demonstrated characteristics of island syndrome also have different glucocorticoid levels than their mainland conspecifics. Here, we used a long-term museum collection of deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) obtained from two archipelagos and two mainland regions to test the hypothesis that island syndrome includes changes in time-averaged corticosterone levels, as measured in hair. As predicted by island syndrome, deer mice from islands were structurally larger and heavier for their given structural size than their mainland conspecifics. When we compared size-matched individuals (i.e., holding size constant), hair corticosterone levels did not differ between island and mainland mice. However, corticosterone levels scaled positively with body mass and condition across our sample population. This led to a relative increase in corticosterone levels among median-sized mice from islands relative to median-sized mice from mainland populations. We conclude that island syndrome does include effects on deer mouse stress physiology but only indirectly through the evolution of larger body size in island populations.

岛屿生活间接影响小型哺乳动物毛发糖皮质激素水平。
在大陆体型较小的陆地脊椎动物往往比大陆同类体型更大,表现出更温顺的行为——这是一组被称为“岛屿综合症”的特征。这种岛屿特有的特征通常归因于岛屿上的捕食压力比大陆上的低。虽然岛屿脊椎动物的形态和行为受到了极大的关注,但相对较少的研究比较了岛屿和大陆种群之间的生理特征。鉴于糖皮质激素等激素参与了对捕食的反应,因此有理由测试表现出岛屿综合征特征的岛屿种群的糖皮质激素水平是否也与大陆种群不同。在这里,我们使用了从两个群岛和两个大陆地区获得的鹿鼠(Peromyscus maniculatus)的长期博物馆收藏来验证岛屿综合征包括在毛发中测量的时间平均皮质酮水平变化的假设。正如岛综合症所预测的那样,来自岛屿的鹿鼠在结构上比它们的大陆同类更大、更重。当我们比较大小匹配的个体(即保持大小不变)时,毛发皮质酮水平在岛鼠和大陆鼠之间没有差异。然而,在我们的样本人群中,皮质酮水平与体重和身体状况呈正相关。这导致来自岛屿的中等大小小鼠的皮质酮水平相对于来自大陆种群的中等大小小鼠有所增加。我们得出结论,岛屿综合征确实包括对鹿鼠应激生理的影响,但只是间接地通过岛屿种群中更大体型的进化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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