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Within-individual plasticity explains age-related decrease in stress response in a short-lived bird.


ABSTRACT: A crucial problem for every organism is how to allocate energy between competing life-history components. The optimal allocation decision is often state-dependent and mediated by hormones. Here, we investigated how age, a major state variable affects individuals' hormonal response to a standardized stressor: a trait that may reflect allocation between self-maintenance and reproduction. We caught free-living house sparrows and measured their hormonal (corticosterone) response to capture stress in consecutive years. Using a long-term ringing dataset, we determined the age of the birds, and we partitioned the variation into within- and among-individual age components to investigate the effects of plasticity versus selection or gene flow, respectively, on the stress response. We found large among-individual variation in the birds' hormone profiles, but overall, birds responded less strongly to capture stress as they grew older. These results suggest that stress responsiveness is a plastic trait that may vary within individuals in an adaptive manner, and natural selection may act on the reaction norms producing optimal phenotypic response in the actual environment and life-history stage.

SUBMITTER: Lendvai AZ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4528442 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Within-individual plasticity explains age-related decrease in stress response in a short-lived bird.

Lendvai Ádám Z ÁZ   Giraudeau Mathieu M   Bókony Veronika V   Angelier Frédéric F   Chastel Olivier O  

Biology letters 20150701 7


A crucial problem for every organism is how to allocate energy between competing life-history components. The optimal allocation decision is often state-dependent and mediated by hormones. Here, we investigated how age, a major state variable affects individuals' hormonal response to a standardized stressor: a trait that may reflect allocation between self-maintenance and reproduction. We caught free-living house sparrows and measured their hormonal (corticosterone) response to capture stress in  ...[more]

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