2005
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00484.2004
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Exposure to chronic stress downregulates corticosterone responses to acute stressors

Abstract: (Sturnus vulgaris) to test whether corticosterone responses differed in birds held under normal laboratory conditions or conditions of chronic stress. Surprisingly, both basal corticosterone concentrations and corticosterone responses to acute stress were significantly reduced when birds were chronically stressed. To determine the mechanism underlying this reduced response, animals under both conditions were injected with lactated Ringer's solution (control), adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), arginine vasotocin (AV… Show more

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Cited by 367 publications
(321 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
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“…Our results indicate that captivity and additional anthropogenic stressors while in captivity may exacerbate chronic stress with the potential to compromise the health of animals and their ability to cope with stressors following release. The decrease in baseline CORT concentration that we observed in chukar following their release parallels other recent data on chronic stress in wild, free-living and wild-caught captive birds (Rich & Romero 2005;Cyr & Romero 2007). The captivity-translocate chukar also experienced greater weight loss compared with the other groups.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our results indicate that captivity and additional anthropogenic stressors while in captivity may exacerbate chronic stress with the potential to compromise the health of animals and their ability to cope with stressors following release. The decrease in baseline CORT concentration that we observed in chukar following their release parallels other recent data on chronic stress in wild, free-living and wild-caught captive birds (Rich & Romero 2005;Cyr & Romero 2007). The captivity-translocate chukar also experienced greater weight loss compared with the other groups.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…We partitioned major components of translocation (capture, transport, captivity and release to novel area) in order to establish how each step of the translocation process affected CORT release. We measured changes in baseline and stress-induced CORT as well as changes in adrenal sensitivity and efficacy of the negative feedback system (Rich & Romero 2005) in addition to changes in chukar mass. We hypothesized that if translocation procedures cause chronic stress, then subjecting individuals to a progressive series of translocation components will result in increasingly disrupted stress physiology.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many studies have challenged birds with one or more pituitary and/or hypothalamic hormones (i.e., ACTH, CRF, and arginine vasotocin) to elicit downstream endocrine responses [3,55,64,54,20]. In our study, neither CRF nor ACTH challenges elicited any greater CORT release than did saline in handled or non-handled nestling kestrels.…”
Section: Hormone Challengescontrasting
confidence: 71%
“…This could either help to promote the maintenance of breeding behavior later in the season, be a product of lowered stress due to abundant food and good condition, or alternatively, attenuation of the stress response, a symptom of chronic stress during breeding. However, based on current knowledge, chronically stressed birds tend to reduce both their CBG capacity and CORT response (Fleshner et al 1995;Rich and Romero 2005;Cyr et al 2007). Thus these breeding Gouldian finches do not fit the profile of chronically stressed birds.…”
Section: Stress Response Variation In Declining Tropical Versus Commomentioning
confidence: 99%