| Literature DB >> 25511258 |
Abstract
The Earth has always been a changeable place but now warming trends shift seasons and storms occur with greater frequency, intensity and duration. This has prompted reference to the modern era as the Anthropocene caused by human activity. This era poses great challenges for all life on earth and important questions include why and how some organisms can cope and others cannot? It is of heuristic value to consider a framework for types of environmental signals and how they might act. This is especially important as predictable changes of the environment (seasonality) are shifting rapidly as well as unpredictable changes (perturbations) in novel ways. What we need to know is how organisms perceive their environment, transduce that information into neuroendocrine signals that orchestrate morphological, physiological and behavioral responses. Given these goals we can begin to address the questions: do neuroendocrine systems have sufficient flexibility to acclimate to significant change in phenology, are genetic changes leading to adaptation necessary, or both?Entities:
Keywords: Allostasis; Anthropocene; Neuroendocrine pathways; Photoperiod; Seasonality
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25511258 DOI: 10.1016/j.yfrne.2014.11.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroendocrinol ISSN: 0091-3022 Impact factor: 8.606