Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped

De Rango E, Schwarz J, Zenth F, Piedrahita P, Páez-Rosas D, Crocker DE, Krüger O (2021)
Oecologia 195(1): 25-35.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 80.67 KB
Autor*in
De Rango, EugeneUniBi; Schwarz, JonasUniBi; Zenth, Friederike; Piedrahita, Paolo; Páez-Rosas, Diego; Crocker, Daniel E.; Krüger, OliverUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
Between-individual variation in behavior can emerge through complex interactions between state-related mechanisms, which include internal physiological constraints or feedback derived from the external environment. State-related conditions can be especially influential during early life, when parental effort and exposure to social stress may canalize consistent differences in offspring hormonal profiles and foster specific behavioral strategies. Here, we unravel how relevant state variables, including sex, somatic condition, local population density, and maternal traits, contribute to within-cohort differences in stress, sex, and thyroid hormone axes in dependent Galapagos sea lions with the primary goal of understanding downstream effects on boldness, docility, habitat use, and activity. Pups within denser natal sites had higher levels of cortisol and thyroid T4, a prohormone and proxy for metabolic reserves, likely as an adaptive physiological response after exposure to increased numbers of conspecific interactions. Furthermore, considering maternal effects, mothers in better body condition produced pups with higher testosterone yet downregulated basal cortisol and thyroid T4. This hormonal profile was correlated with increased boldness toward novel objects and attenuated stress responsiveness during capture. Intriguingly, pups with increased thyroid T3, the biologically active form, maintained faster somatic growth and were observed to have increased activity and extensively explored surrounding habitats. Collectively, these findings provide comprehensive evidence for several links to hormone-mediated behavioral strategies, highlighted by variation in socio-environmental and maternally derived input during a foundational life stage.
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Zeitschriftentitel
Oecologia
Band
195
Ausgabe
1
Seite(n)
25-35
ISSN
0029-8549
eISSN
1432-1939
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2950283

Zitieren

De Rango E, Schwarz J, Zenth F, et al. Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped. Oecologia. 2021;195(1):25-35.
De Rango, E., Schwarz, J., Zenth, F., Piedrahita, P., Páez-Rosas, D., Crocker, D. E., & Krüger, O. (2021). Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped. Oecologia, 195(1), 25-35. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-020-04815-5
De Rango, Eugene, Schwarz, Jonas, Zenth, Friederike, Piedrahita, Paolo, Páez-Rosas, Diego, Crocker, Daniel E., and Krüger, Oliver. 2021. “Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped”. Oecologia 195 (1): 25-35.
De Rango, E., Schwarz, J., Zenth, F., Piedrahita, P., Páez-Rosas, D., Crocker, D. E., and Krüger, O. (2021). Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped. Oecologia 195, 25-35.
De Rango, E., et al., 2021. Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped. Oecologia, 195(1), p 25-35.
E. De Rango, et al., “Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped”, Oecologia, vol. 195, 2021, pp. 25-35.
De Rango, E., Schwarz, J., Zenth, F., Piedrahita, P., Páez-Rosas, D., Crocker, D.E., Krüger, O.: Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped. Oecologia. 195, 25-35 (2021).
De Rango, Eugene, Schwarz, Jonas, Zenth, Friederike, Piedrahita, Paolo, Páez-Rosas, Diego, Crocker, Daniel E., and Krüger, Oliver. “Developmental conditions promote individual differentiation of endocrine axes and behavior in a tropical pinniped”. Oecologia 195.1 (2021): 25-35.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2021-02-19T07:24:15Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
923ca88ae72f9305a81b26c00d6ead7f


Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 33340345
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar