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Wild jackdaws’ reproductive success and their offspring’s stress hormones are connected to provisioning rate and brood size not to parental neophobia

机译:野生寒鸦的繁殖成功及其后代的压力激素与供应率和育雏量有关而不与父母的恐惧症有关

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摘要

Many species show individual variation in neophobia and stress hormones, but the causes and consequences of this variation in the wild are unclear. Variation in neophobia levels could affect the number of offspring animals produce, and more subtly influence the rearing environment and offspring development. Nutritional deficits during development can elevate levels of stress hormones that trigger long-term effects on learning, memory, and survival. Therefore measuring offspring stress hormone levels, such as corticosterone (CORT), helps determine if parental neophobia influences the condition and developmental trajectory of young. As a highly neophobic species, jackdaws (Corvus monedula) are excellent for exploring the potential effects of parental neophobia on developing offspring. We investigated if neophobic responses, alongside known drivers of fitness, influence nest success and offspring hormone responses in wild breeding jackdaws. Despite its consistency across the breeding season, and suggestions in the literature that it should have importance for reproductive fitness, parental neophobia did not predict nest success, provisioning rates or offspring hormone levels. Instead, sibling competition and poor parental care contributed to natural variation in stress responses. Parents with lower provisioning rates fledged fewer chicks, chicks from larger broods had elevated baseline CORT levels, and chicks with later hatching dates showed higher stress-induced CORT levels. Since CORT levels may influence the expression of adult neophobia, variation in juvenile stress responses could explain the development and maintenance of neophobic variation within the adult population.
机译:许多物种显示出新恐惧症和应激激素的个体差异,但是在野外这种差异的原因和后果尚不清楚。新恐惧症水平的变化可能会影响后代动物的生产数量,并且会更细微地影响饲养环境和后代的发育。发育过程中的营养不足会提高压力荷尔蒙的水平,从而触发对学习,记忆和生存的长期影响。因此,测量后代应激激素水平,例如皮质酮(CORT),有助于确定父母的恐惧症是否影响了年轻人的状况和发育轨迹。寒鸦(Corvus monedula)是一种高度新恐惧症的物种,非常适合探索父母新恐惧症对后代发育的潜在影响。我们调查了新恐惧症反应以及已知的适应性驱动因素是否影响了野生繁殖寒鸦巢成功和后代激素反应。尽管其在整个繁殖季节都具有一致性,并且在文献中建议它对生殖健康具有重要意义,但父母新恐惧症并未预测巢的成功,供应率或后代激素水平。相反,兄弟姐妹的竞争和较差的父母照顾导致了压力反应的自然变化。配种率较低的父母出雏的雏鸡较少,来自较大育雏的雏鸡的基线CORT水平较高,而孵化日期较晚的雏鸡则表现出较高的应激诱导的CORT水平。由于CORT水平可能会影响成人恐惧症的表达,因此青少年应激反应的变化可以解释成人人群中恐惧症变化的发生和维持。

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