| Literature DB >> 27145729 |
Xiaoli Feng1, Xujun Wu1,2, Ryan J Morrill1, Zhifei Li1,2, Chunlu Li1, Shangchuan Yang1, Zhaoxia Li1, Ding Cui3,4, Longbao Lv5, Zhengfei Hu5, Bo Zhang1, Yong Yin6, Liyun Guo7, Dongdong Qin1,3,4, Xintian Hu1,8.
Abstract
A common pattern in dominance hierarchies is that some ranks result in higher levels of psychosocial stress than others. Such stress can lead to negative health outcomes, possibly through altered levels of stress hormones. The dominance rank-stress physiology relationship is known to vary between species; sometimes dominants show higher levels of glucocorticoid stress hormones, whereas in other cases subordinates show higher levels. It is less clear how this relationship varies between groups of different ages or cultures. In this study, we used long-term cortisol measurement methods to compare the effect of rank on cortisol levels in adult and adolescent male rhesus macaques. In the adult groups, subordinates had significantly higher cortisol levels. In the adolescents, no significant correlation between cortisol and status was found. Further analysis demonstrated that the adult hierarchy was stricter than that of the adolescents. Adult subordinates received extreme aggression more frequently than dominants, and this class of behavior was positively correlated with cortisol; by contrast, adolescents showed neither trend. Together, these findings provide evidence for a cortisol-rank relationship determined by social factors, namely, despotism of the group, and highlight the importance of group-specific social analysis when comparing or combining results obtained from different groups of animals.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27145729 PMCID: PMC4857099 DOI: 10.1038/srep25431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Correlation between DSS (as a marker of social status) and hair cortisol levels in all males (r = −0.183, p = 0.393).
Figure 2Relationships between DSS (as a marker of social status) and hair cortisol in adults (Fig. 2A; r = −0.636, p = 0.035) and adolescents (Fig. 2B; r = 0.163, p = 0.595).
Figure 3Differences in hair cortisol levels between adults and adolescents (t-test, p = 0.254).
Correlation of stress-related behaviors with hair cortisol levels in adolescents.
| Correlation with cortisol level | Receipt of (extreme and mild) aggression | Receipt of (extreme and mild) submission | (Extreme and mild) aggressive displays | (Extreme and mild) submissive displays |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| r | −0.160, −0.299 | 0.057, −0.379 | −0.208, −0.127 | 0.057, −0.145 |
| p | 0.547, 0.304 | 0.154, 0.180 | 0.426, 0.660 | 0.154, 0.602 |
Spearman correlation.
Figure 4Correlation of the receipt of extreme aggression to hair cortisol (r = 0.686, p = 0.025, adult; r = −0.160, p = 0.547, adolescent).
Correlation of stress-related behaviors with hair cortisol levels in adults.
| Correlation with cortisol | Receipt of (extreme and mild) aggression | Receipt of (extreme and mild) submission | (Extreme and mild) aggressive displays | (Extreme and mild) submissive displays |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| r | 0.686, 0.138 | #, −0.506 | 0.025, 0.069 | #, 0.385 |
| p | 0.025, 0.684 | #, 0.111 | 0.826, 0.843 | #, 0.244 |
(Spearman correlation, # means not available).
Figure 5Comparison of the rate of receipt of extreme aggression between dominant and subordinate adults and adolescents (Mean ± SEM).
(t(5,6) = 2.318, p = 0.046, adults; t(6,7) = 1.325, p = 0.212, adolescents).