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Multiscale evaluation of thermal dependence in the glucocorticoid response of vertebrates

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Version 2 2024-06-05, 08:12
Version 1 2016-09-26, 16:56
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 08:12 authored by TS Jessop, ML Lane, L Teasdale, D Stuart-Fox, RS Wilson, V Careau, IT Moore
Environmental temperature has profound effects on animal physiology, ecology, and evolution. Glucocorticoid (GC) hormones, through effects on phenotypic performance and life history, provide fundamental vertebrate physiological adaptations to environmental variation, yet we lack a comprehensive understanding of how temperature influences GC regulation in vertebrates. Using field studies and metaand comparative phylogenetic analyses, we investigated how acute change and broadscale variation in temperature correlated with baseline and stress-induced GC levels. Glucocorticoid levels were found to be temperature and taxon dependent, but generally, vertebrates exhibited strong positive correlations with acute changes in temperature. Furthermore, reptile baseline, bird baseline, and capture stressinduced GC levels to some extent covaried with broadscale environmental temperature. Thus, vertebrate GC function appears clearly thermally influenced. However, we caution that lack of detailed knowledge of thermal plasticity, heritability, and the basis for strong phylogenetic signal in GC responses limits our current understanding of the role of GC hormones in species’ responses to current and future climate variation.

History

Journal

American naturalist

Volume

188

Article number

3

Pagination

342-356

Location

Chicago, Ill.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0003-0147

eISSN

1537-5323

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, University of Chicago

Issue

3

Publisher

University of Chicago