| Literature DB >> 27293742 |
Gemma Carroll1, Emma Turner1, Peter Dann2, Rob Harcourt1.
Abstract
Studies of physiology can provide important insight into how animals are coping with challenges in their environment and can signal the potential effects of exposure to human activity in both the short and long term. In this study, we measured the physiological and behavioural response of little penguins (Eudyptula minor) that were naïve to human activity over 30 min of capture and handling. We assessed relationships between corticosterone secretion, behaviour, sex and time of day in order to characterize the determinants of the natural stress response. We then compared the response of these naïve penguins with the responses of female little penguins that had been exposed to research activity (bimonthly nest check and weighing) and to both research activity (monthly nest check and weighing) and evening viewing by tourists. We found that corticosterone concentrations increased significantly over 30 min of capture, with naïve penguins demonstrating a more acute stress response during the day than at night. Penguins that had previously been exposed to handling at the research and research/visitor sites showed elevated corticosterone concentrations and consistently more aggressive behaviour after 30 min compared with naïve birds, although there were no significant differences in baseline corticosterone concentrations. Our findings demonstrate that these little penguins have not habituated to routine capture, but rather mount a heightened physiological and behavioural response to handling by humans. Less invasive research monitoring techniques, such as individual identification with PIT tags and automatic recording and weighing, and a reduction in handling during the day should be considered to mitigate some of the potentially negative effects of disturbance. Given the paucity of data on the long-term consequences of heightened stress on animal physiology, our study highlights the need for further investigation of the relationship between the corticosterone stress response and fitness outcomes, such as breeding success and survival.Entities:
Keywords: Endocrinology; habituation; human disturbance; monitoring; seabird; tourism
Year: 2016 PMID: 27293742 PMCID: PMC4732403 DOI: 10.1093/conphys/cov061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Physiol ISSN: 2051-1434 Impact factor: 3.079
Comparison of the top four models evaluating the influence of parameters sex, day vs. night and sample time (4, 10, 20 and 30 min post-capture) on corticosterone concentration of naïve penguins, with ID as a random effect
| Model | K | LL | AICc | ΔAICc | W |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cort ∼ day vs. night × time + (1 | ID) | 10 | −920.535 | 1862.4 | 0 | 0.6652 |
| Cort ∼ day vs. night × time + sex + (1 | ID)a | 11 | −920.249 | 1864.1 | 1.70 | 0.2843 |
| Cort ∼ day vs. night × sex × time + (1 | ID) | 18 | −913.619 | 1867.5 | 5.15 | 0.0506 |
| Cort ∼ day vs. night + time + (1 | ID) | 7 | −937.982 | 1890.6 | 28.23 | 0.0000 |
| Cort ∼ time + (1 | ID) | 6 | −951.388 | 1915.3 | 52.88 | 0.0000 |
The null model (sample time and random effect) is included for comparison. Abbreviations: AICc is Akaike’s information criterion corrected for small sample sizes; ΔAICc shows how well each of the models performs in relationship to the best model; K is the number of model parameters; LL is the log likelihood; and W is the Akaike weight of each model, showing the probablility that it is the best model in the set.
The second model in the set is likely to be uninformative because it adds a single additional parameter and the ΔAICc is within 2 points (Arnold, 2010).
Figure 1:The corticosterone stress response of little penguins that had not previously encountered human activity, throughout 30 min of capture and handling. Penguins are grouped here by their sex and whether measurements were taken during the day or night.
Maximum likelihood estimates of parameters in the best model describing the corticosterone response in the control group, with standard error and 95% confidence intervals
| Fixed effect | Parameter estimates | Standard error | 95% Confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 15.42 | 10.22 | −4.80, 35.55 |
| Night (day) | −19.48 | 15.02 | −49.12, 10.15 |
| 10 min (4 min) | 58.62 | 10.20 | 38.44, 78.75* |
| 20 min (4 min) | 127.36 | 10.02 | 107.57, 147.15* |
| 30 min (4 min) | 185.81 | 9.83 | 166.34, 205.18* |
| 10 min : night | −29.47 | 15.43 | −59.96, 0.94 |
| 20 min : night | −55.65 | 15.22 | −85.72, −25.63* |
| 30 min : night | −93.14 | 15.62 | −123.94, −62.29* |
Base levels against which other levels are compared in parentheses.
Effects with confidence intervals not overlapping zero were significant at P < 0.05.
Maximum likelihood estimates of parameters in the model describing the corticosterone response in relationship to site, with standard error and 95% confidence intervals
| Fixed effect | Parameter estimate | Standard error | 95% Confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 4.23 | 14.55 | −24.53, 33.08 |
| 10 min (4 min) | 31.77 | 14.03 | 4.02, 59.59* |
| 20 min (4 min) | 86.77 | 13.89 | 59.31, 114.32* |
| 30 min (4 min) | 109.77 | 14.75 | 80.62, 139.01* |
| Site R (C) | 8.84 | 19.67 | −30.19, 47.78 |
| Site RV (C) | 5.26 | 19.51 | −33.34, 43.97 |
| 10 min: site R | 18.09 | 18.98 | −19.74, 55.56 |
| 20 min : site R | 32.75 | 18.61 | −4.14, 69.55 |
| 30 min : site R | 41.46 | 19.19 | 3.47, 79.42* |
| 10 min : site RV | 6.19 | 18.84 | −31.08, 43.54 |
| 20 min : site RV | 6.98 | 18.62 | −29.83, 43.89 |
| 30 min : site RV | 41.08 | 19.15 | 3.22, 79.03* |
Reference levels are in parentheses. Abbreviations: C, control site; R, research site; and RV, research/visitor site.
Effects with confidence intervals not overlapping zero were significant at P < 0.05.
Figure 2:The corticosterone stress response of little penguins at the following three sites: the control site, where penguins had not encountered humans before; the research site, where penguins were handled twice a month for monitoring purposes; and the research/visitor site, where penguins were handled monthly for monitoring and also observed nightly by tourists at the ‘Penguin Parade’.
Figure 3:Observations of little penguin behaviour states at three sites (control, research and research/visitor) as a proportional stacked barplot (percentage of penguins in each behaviour state by site); 0 (white) represented penguins in the least aggressive behaviour state, whereas 3 (red) represented penguins in the most aggressive behaviour state.