2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-015-2048-0
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Parasites, mate attractiveness and female feather corticosterone levels in a socially monogamous bird

Abstract: Stress is ubiquitous in the life of animals and a key determinant of their well-being and fitness. By quantifying levels of feather corticosterone in growing feathers (CORTf), we measured integrated stress responses in a monogamous game bird, the red grouse Lagopus lagopus scoticus. We investigated the effects of parasites and social mate choice on female CORTf levels during pairing, and tested the hypothesis that females with more parasites and paired with less attractive males have higher CORTf. We experimen… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…By definition, parasites impose costs on hosts that have effects, among others, at the genetic [69][70][71], physiological [72][73][74][75], behavioural [61,[76][77][78] and demographic levels [79][80][81]. However, the specific mechanism through which parasite infection during early life shapes the covariation between fitness and ornamental expression in adulthood is unknown and out of the scope of this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By definition, parasites impose costs on hosts that have effects, among others, at the genetic [69][70][71], physiological [72][73][74][75], behavioural [61,[76][77][78] and demographic levels [79][80][81]. However, the specific mechanism through which parasite infection during early life shapes the covariation between fitness and ornamental expression in adulthood is unknown and out of the scope of this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Entre las causas que se han descrito en la literatura, el incremento en los niveles de estrés pueden deberse a variaciones en otros factores a lo largo de los años, entre los que se podrían encontrar un incremento de los predadores (Cockrem y Silverin 2002;Bennett et al 2016), parásitos (Mougeot et al 2016) o molestias humanas, pero que requeriría un estudio adicional y específico para determinar la fuente de variación de los niveles de estrés durante esos años. Podría sugerirse que el incremento de la corticosterona a lo largo de los años pueda deberse al deterioro temporal de las plumas más antiguas, reduciendo los niveles detectados.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…Por tanto, la estimación de los niveles de estrés fisiológico en plumas puede ser un buen indicador de estrés fisiológico en aves en libertad. Esta técnica ya se ha utilizado en múltiples estudios de aves, también en galliformes como el lagópodo escocés (Bortolotti et al 2009;Mougeot et al 2010;Wenzel et al 2013;Mougeot et al 2016), en rapaces como el ratonero común (Martinez-Padilla et al 2013), en migradores árticos (Legagneux et al 2014) o en aves marinas (Will et al 2014;Fairhurst et al 2017) que ratifican que mayores niveles de corticosterona en plumas son indicativos de un mayor estrés ambiental, bien debido a mayores niveles de parásitos o dietas deficitarias. Debido a los efectos inmunosupresivos de los niveles de corticosterona, los individuos que mantienen niveles altos de corticosterona de modo crónico, pueden reducir su supervivencia y reproducción (Blas et al 2007;Koren et al 2012), influyendo por tanto en la dinámica poblacional.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…In birds, more than 90% of all species are socially monogamous. Mate choice is constrained by the availability of unpaired individuals in the population and having an unattractive mate can be stressful for the female [77][78][79]. The mate attractiveness hypothesis predicts that females mated to unattractive males should produce more daughters because these daughters will not inherit their father's unelaborated sexual ornaments [80].…”
Section: Social Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%