Brodin Anders, Watson Hannah
Department of Biology, Naturvetarvägen 6A, Lund University, 223 62 Lund, Sweden.
Conserv Physiol. 2023 May 27;11(1):coad033. doi: 10.1093/conphys/coad033. eCollection 2023.
Although the consequences of urbanization for the physiological health of animals are the focus of much active research, an overlooked aspect is how physiology could be indirectly modulated by the urban environment via changes in intraspecific behavioural interactions, particularly among gregarious species. Both urbanization and the establishment, as well as maintenance, of hierarchical rank position are processes that could incur physiological stress. Measurements of glucocorticoids (GCs) in relation to urbanization, however, have yielded inconsistent results. In most cases, GCs have been measured in blood, offering only a 'snapshot' of an animal's current physiological state. Because circulating GCs are incorporated into growing feathers or hair, measurements of feather/hair GCs offer a longer term measure of stress exposure reflecting the whole period of feather/hair growth. During two calendar years, we collected tail feathers from 188 urban and forest great tits () across multiple sampling sites and analysed corticosterone (CORT-the main GC in birds) levels, reflecting CORT exposure during the extended period in late summer and early autumn when great tits moult and winter flocks are formed. Urban individuals exhibited consistently lower feather CORT (fCORT) levels than forest birds indicating lower overall exposure to CORT during this period. The lower fCORT levels in urban individuals could represent an adaptation to cope with the more challenging urban environment, physiological constraints on stress axis function or a trade-off between the ability to respond to stressors and predation risk during moult. Despite the expectation that CORT responses to urbanization are highly context-dependent, the spatial consistency of our results and agreement with a multi-population study of fCORT in European blackbirds () suggests a generalization of the effect of urbanization on CORT exposure during post-breeding moult ( not site- or species-specific).
尽管城市化对动物生理健康的影响是当前许多积极研究的焦点,但一个被忽视的方面是,城市环境如何通过种内行为相互作用的变化,特别是群居物种之间的变化,间接调节生理机能。城市化以及等级地位的建立和维持,都是可能引发生理压力的过程。然而,与城市化相关联的糖皮质激素(GCs)测量结果并不一致。在大多数情况下,GCs是在血液中测量的,这只能提供动物当前生理状态的一个“快照”。由于循环中的GCs会融入正在生长的羽毛或毛发中,因此对羽毛/毛发中GCs的测量提供了一个反映整个羽毛/毛发生长期应激暴露的更长期指标。在两个日历年中,我们从多个采样地点收集了188只城市和森林大山雀()的尾羽,并分析了皮质酮(CORT——鸟类主要的GCs)水平,反映了在夏末和初秋大山雀换羽和形成冬季鸟群的较长时期内的CORT暴露情况。城市个体的羽毛CORT(fCORT)水平始终低于森林鸟类,这表明在此期间它们总体上受到的CORT暴露较低。城市个体较低的fCORT水平可能代表着一种适应,以应对更具挑战性的城市环境、应激轴功能的生理限制,或者是在换羽期间应对应激源的能力与被捕食风险之间的权衡。尽管预期CORT对城市化的反应高度依赖于具体情境,但我们结果的空间一致性以及与欧洲乌鸫()fCORT的多群体研究结果的一致性表明了城市化对繁殖后换羽期间CORT暴露影响的普遍性(而非特定地点或物种)。