| Literature DB >> 27293595 |
Abstract
Non-invasive endocrinology utilizes non-invasive biological samples (such as faeces, urine, hair, aquatic media, and saliva) for the quantification of hormones in wildlife. Urinary-based enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and radio-immunoassay have enabled the rapid quantification of reproductive and stress hormones in amphibians (Anura: Amphibia). With minimal disturbance, these methods can be used to assess the ovarian and testicular endocrine functions as well as physiological stress in captive and free-living populations. Non-invasive endocrine monitoring has therefore greatly advanced our knowledge of the functioning of the stress endocrine system (the hypothalamo-pituitary-interrenal axis) and the reproductive endocrine system (the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis) in the amphibian physiological stress response, reproductive ecology, health and welfare, and survival. Biological (physiological) validation is necessary for obtaining the excretory lag time of hormone metabolites. Urinary-based EIA for the major reproductive hormones, estradiol and progesterone in females and testosterone in males, can be used to track the reproductive hormone profiles in relationship to reproductive behaviour and environmental data in free-living anurans. Urinary-based corticosterone metabolite EIA can be used to assess the sublethal impacts of biological stressors (such as invasive species and pathogenic diseases) as well as anthropogenic induced environmental stressors (e.g. extreme temperatures) on free-living populations. Non-invasive endocrine methods can also assist in the diagnosis of success or failure of captive breeding programmes by measuring the longitudinal patterns of changes in reproductive hormones and corticosterone within captive anurans and comparing the endocrine profiles with health records and reproductive behaviour. This review paper focuses on the reproductive and the stress endocrinology of anurans and demonstrates the uses of non-invasive endocrinology for advancing amphibian conservation physiology. It also provides key technical considerations for future research that will increase the accuracy and reliability of the data and the value of non-invasive endocrinology within the conceptual framework of conservation physiology.Entities:
Keywords: Amphibians; conservation physiology; ecological applications; non-invasive endocrinology; reproduction; stress
Year: 2013 PMID: 27293595 PMCID: PMC4806611 DOI: 10.1093/conphys/cot011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Physiol ISSN: 2051-1434 Impact factor: 3.079
Summary of the studies in non-invasive amphibian endocrinology
| Species | Population | Assay | Reagent source | Hormone | Stressor | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bell frogs ( | Free-living | Urinary | R156/7, R522-2, CL425 | T, EC, P | T, EC, and P levels increased during breeding. | ||
| EIA | EC sexing hormone (98%) | ||||||
| Fijian ground frog ( | Free-living | Urinary | R156/7, R522-2, CL425 | T, EC, P | T, EC, and P levels increased during breeding in both captive and free-living populations. | ||
| Captive | EIA | EC sexing hormone (80%) | |||||
| Fijian ground frog ( | Free-living | Urinary | CJM006 | CORT | ACTH challenge Capture handling | CORT increased in frog urine at 6 h, 1–2 days after ACTH. | |
| Captive | EIA | CORT was elevated 3–4 h after capture handling. | |||||
| No seasonal pattern in CORT. | |||||||
| Cane toad ( | Captive | Urinary | RIA kit (MP Biomedicals, Fountain Parkway Solon, OH, USA) | CORT | ACTH challenge | CORT increased 1–2 days after ACTH | |
| RIA | Short-term capture | CORT was elevated 2 h after capture handling | |||||
| Captivity | No sex difference | ||||||
| Stony Creek Frog ( | Free-living | Urinary | CJM006 | CORT | Chytrid fungus | CORT levels high for chytrid fungus-positive frogs | |
| EIA | |||||||
| Great Barred Frog ( | Free-living | Urinary | CJM006 | CORT | Natural altitudinal gradients | Frogs living at high elevation (660–790 m) had much higher baseline CORT than frogs living lowland (60 m) | (Graham C, Narayan E, McCallum H, Hero J-M unpublished data) |
| EIA | |||||||
| Fijian tree frog ( | Free-living | Urinary | CJM006 | CORT | Capture handling | CORT was elevated 4–5 h after capture handling | |
| EIA | |||||||
| Fijian ground frog ( | Captive | Urinary | CJM006 | CORT | Transportation | CORT was higher 6 h after transportation and after 5 and 15 days in captivity. Returned to baseline after 25 days of captive enrichment | |
| EIA | Captivity | ||||||
| Cane toad ( | Free-living | Urinary | CJM006, R156/7 | CORT, T | Toe clipping | CORT increased 6 h after clipping and remained elevated at 72 h. T decreased 6 h after clipping and remained low at 72 h | |
| EIA | |||||||
| Cane toad ( | Captive | Urinary | CJM006, R156/7 | CORT, T | Manual restraint for 5, 15, or 30 min | CORT was much higher after 15 or 30 min restraint than after 5 min restraint. T was low after 5, 15, or 30 min restraint | |
| EIA | |||||||
| Fijian ground frog ( | Captive | Urinary | CJM006 | CORT | Cane toad ( | CORT was elevated after 6 h exposure to sight of a cane toad | (Narayan E, Cockrem JF, Hero J-M unpublished data) |
| EIA | |||||||
| Common toad ( | Free-living | Urinary | EIA kit no. 500651 (Cayman Chemical, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA) | CORT | Habitat availability and fragmentation | CORT was significantly altered by habitat availability and fragmentation | |
| EIA | |||||||
| Common toad ( | Outdoor enclosure | Saliva | EIA kit no. 500651 (Cayman Chemical) | CORT | Matrix resistance (substrate choice experiments) | Adult toads had higher CORT on ploughed soil than on forest litter or meadow substrates | |
| Common midwife toad ( | Laboratory | Aquatic media | EIA kit no. 500651 (Cayman Chemical) | CORT | Chytrid fungus | CORT release rates were higher in infected populations of two species of tadpoles than in an uninfected population for both species | |
| Mallorcan midwife toad ( | |||||||
| Maud Island frog ( | Free-living | Urinary | R156/7, R522-2, CL425 | T, EC, P | T, EC, and P peaking during winter breeding. EC 90% success as the sexing hormone | ||
| EIA | |||||||
| American toad ( | Captive | Faecal EIA | Sigma Chemical Company (St Louis, MO, USA) | T, EC, P | First report of faecal hormone metabolite analysis in amphibians. | ||
| Boreal toads ( | T better sexing hormone than EC and P | ||||||
Abbreviations: ACTH, adrenocorticotrophic hormone; CORT, corticosterone; EC, estrone conjugate; EIA, enzyme immunoassay; P, progesterone; RIA, radio-immunoassay; and T, testosterone.
Figure 1:Conceptual model presenting non-invasive amphibian endocrinology (innermost circle) as a key component of amphibian conservation physiology (outermost circle) through its integration with five key areas of research (smaller circles).