| Literature DB >> 31824674 |
Clare Parker Fischer1, L Michael Romero1.
Abstract
Wild animals are brought into captivity for many reasons-conservation, research, agriculture and the exotic pet trade. While the physical needs of animals are met in captivity, the conditions of confinement and exposure to humans can result in physiological stress. The stress response consists of the suite of hormonal and physiological reactions to help an animal survive potentially harmful stimuli. The adrenomedullary response results in increased heart rate and muscle tone (among other effects); elevated glucocorticoid (GC) hormones help to direct resources towards immediate survival. While these responses are adaptive, overexposure to stress can cause physiological problems, such as weight loss, changes to the immune system and decreased reproductive capacity. Many people who work with wild animals in captivity assume that they will eventually adjust to their new circumstances. However, captivity may have long-term or permanent impacts on physiology if the stress response is chronically activated. We reviewed the literature on the effects of introduction to captivity in wild-caught individuals on the physiological systems impacted by stress, particularly weight changes, GC regulation, adrenomedullary regulation and the immune and reproductive systems. This paper did not review studies on captive-born animals. Adjustment to captivity has been reported for some physiological systems in some species. However, for many species, permanent alterations to physiology may occur with captivity. For example, captive animals may have elevated GCs and/or reduced reproductive capacity compared to free-living animals even after months in captivity. Full adjustment to captivity may occur only in some species, and may be dependent on time of year or other variables. We discuss some of the methods that can be used to reduce chronic captivity stress.Entities:
Keywords: captivity; glucocorticoids; immune; reproduction; stress
Year: 2019 PMID: 31824674 PMCID: PMC6892464 DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coz093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Physiol ISSN: 2051-1434 Impact factor: 3.079
Figure 1Examples of experimental designs to assess the effects of captivity on a physiological variable (e.g. GC concentration) (A) Comparison of captive individuals to free-living populations. In some cases, the free-living samples were acquired at the same time that the study population was brought into captivity. In other designs, the free-living samples were taken from entirely different populations than the origin of the captive animals (e.g. comparing zoo-housed animals to wild conspecifics). (B) Each individual measured immediately at capture and again after a period of captivity (days to months). (C and D) Each individual measured immediately at capture and resampled at multiple timepoints. Some studies focused on the first few days, with sampling points relatively close together (C). Other studies may not have taken another sample until several weeks after capture (D).
Figure 2Weight change as a function of captivity duration. Data were collected from 35 studies listed in Table 1, with studies counted multiple times if they measured multiple time points after introduction to captivity. The number of species that lost weight in captivity (relative to wild, free-living animals) decreased with captivity duration.
Figure 4Changes in neutrophil or heterophil (N or H:L) to lymphocyte ratio in captivity as a function of time. Data were collected from 19 studies listed in Table 4, with studies counted multiple times if they measured multiple time points after introduction to captivity. The percent of studies that recorded elevated N or H:L ratio in captivity decreased with the amount of time spent in captivity.
Mass changes with captivity in wild animals
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| Weight gain in captivity | Mammals | Steller sea lions ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | Average 2 months | ( |
| Richardson’s ground squirrel ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 14 days | ( | ||
| Columbian ground squirrel ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 13 days | ( | ||
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 37 days | ( | ||
| Birds | Ruff ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 1 year (mass increase in first few weeks, then seasonal fluctuations) | ( | |
| North Island saddlebacks ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 3 days | ( | ||
| No change in mass with captivity | Mammals | Vervet monkeys ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 8 months | ( |
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 20 weeks | ( | ||
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 8 weeks | ( | ||
| Birds | Curve-billed thrasher ( | Repeated measures;multiple timepoints | 80 days | ( | |
| Reptiles | Duvaucel’s gecoks ( | Captive vs free-living population | >1 year | ( | |
| Amphibians | Cururu toad ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 13 days | ( | |
| Toad ( | Captive vs free-living population, multiple timepoints2 | up to 90 days | ( | ||
| Weight loss in captivity | Mammals | Beluga whale ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 10 weeks | ( |
| Harbor seal ( | Captive vs free-living populations | >4 weeks | ( | ||
| African green monkey ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | 45 days | ( | ||
| Bighorn sheep ( | Repeated measures;multiple timepoints | 14 days | ( | ||
| Birds | Zebra finches ( | Captive vs free-living population | 60 days | ( | |
| Rufous-collared sparrows ( | Captive vs free-living population | 2 weeks | ( | ||
| Great tit ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 1 week | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 1 week | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 1 week | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 5 days | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 27 days | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 66 days | ( | ||
| Amphibians | Toad ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 60 days | ( | |
| Fish | Electric fish ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 37 days | ( | |
| Weight lost then regained in captivity | Mammals | Rhesus macaques ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight decreased by Week 5, increased through 1 year | ( |
| European wild rabbits ( | Repeated measures; | Weight decreased by Week 2, increased and stabilized by Week 4 | ( | ||
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight decreased over 5 weeks, increased through Week 20 | ( | ||
| Tuco-tuco ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss on Days 10 and 20, regained by Day 30 | ( | ||
| Birds | White-crowned sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss at Day 1, increased through day 14 | ( | |
| Greenfinch ( | Captive vs free-living population | Birds lighter at 1 month, heavier than wild at 2 months | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss on Days 11–25, regained by day 35 | ( | ||
| Chukar partridge ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss at Day 1, partially regained at 5 and 9 days | ( | ||
| Fish | Skipjack tuna ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss at Day 2, regained at 20 days | ( | |
| Chukar partridge ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss at Day 1, partially regained at 5 and 9 days | ( | ||
| Fish | Skipjack tuna ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Weight loss at Day 2, regained at 20 days | ( | |
1No at-capture values—first measured at 2 months.
2Low sample sizes at each time point.
3Captive pups were rehabilitated after rescue.
4Slight weight loss from Day 10 to Day 60.
5Females did not reach at capture weight, but all spontaneously aborted or gave birth.
*Data from this paper were used to generate Fig. 2.
Patterns of change in stress-induced GCs and negative feedback with captivity in wild animals
| GC pattern during adjustment to captivity | Species | Study design | Timeframe | How was free-living GCs established? | Sample type | Citation | |
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| No change in acute stress-induced GCs over captivity period | Mammals | Tuco-tuco ( | Captive vs free-living populations | 20 days | Free-living population | Plasma (30 and 60 min) | ( |
| Birds | Curve-billed thrasher ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 80 days | At-capture samples | Plasma (30 min) | ( | |
| Blackbirds ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 22 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (30 and 60 min) | ( | ||
| Western screech owl ( | Captive vs free-living populations | >1 month | Free-living animals | Plasma (6–10 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 5 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (30 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Up to 1 month | At-capture sample | Plasma (60 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 7 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (30 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 7 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (30 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 66 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (30 min) | ( | ||
| White-crowned sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (<30 min) | ( | ||
| Fish | Winter flounder ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (60 min) | ( | |
| Acute stress-induced GCs reduced in captivity | Birds | Chukar partridge ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 9 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (30 min) | ( |
| White-crowned sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (30 min) | ( | ||
| Acute stress-induced GCs increased in captivity | Mammals | Degu ( | Captive vs free-living populations | >1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (30 and 60 min) | ( |
| Birds | White-crowned sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (30 min) | ( | |
| Reptiles | Water snake ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 5–8 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (60 min) | ( | |
| Amphibians | Eastern red-spotted newt ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | >1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (30 min) | ( | |
| Negative feedback strength decreased with captivity, then increased | Birds | Chukar partridge ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Neg. feedback reduced at Day 5; recovered at Day 9 | At-capture sample | Plasma (90 min after DEX) | ( |
| Negative feedback strength increased with captivity | Birds | House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 5 days | At-capture sample | Plasma 90 min after DEX) | ( |
| Negative feedback strength did not change with captivity | Birds | House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 66 days | At-capture sample | Plasma 90 min after DEX) | ( |
1SI GCs lower post captivity in early winter, but no change during any other time of year.
2Outside of breeding season and molt.
3During the breeding season.
4During the post-breeding/molting season.
5SI GCs higher post captivity in pre-breeding and breeding season, not in winter.
Changes in leukocytes during captivity
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| Mammals | Spanish ibex ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | At-capture sample | 14 months | ↓ | – | ↓ | ↑ (n.c.) | ( |
| Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | At-capture sample | 1 year | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ (n.c.) | ( | |
| Brushtailed possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | None—first sample at Week 1 of captivity | 20 weeks | – | – | ( | |||
| Beluga whale ( | Repeated measures; | At capture sample and free-living population | 2.5 months | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ (n.c.) | ( | |
| brushtailed possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints (different housing conditions) | None—unclear when first sample was obtained | 2 months | – | – | – | – (n.c.) | ( | |
| Howler monkey ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | At-capture sample | 2 months | – | – | – | – (n.c.) | ( | |
| Steller sea lions ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | At-capture sample and free-living population | 2 months | ↓ | ( | ||||
| Black rhinoceros ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | None – first sample after stressful capture (up to 1 hour) | 3–4 weeks | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ (n.c.) | ( | ||
| Vicuñas ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | At-capture sample | 12 days | – | – | – | – | ( | |
| Birds | Red knots ( | Captive vs free-living population | Free-living population | ~1 year | – | ↓ | – | ↓ (n.c.) | ( |
| Ruff ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | None—does not say when first sample taken relative to capture | 1 year | – | ( | ||||
| Greenfinches ( | Captive vs free-living population | Free-living population | 2 months | – | – | ↑ | ↓ | ( | |
| Zebra finches ( | Captive vs free-living population | Free-living population | 10 days | ↓ | ↓ | ( | |||
| 2 months | – | ↓ | |||||||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; early- vs late-captivity | None—first sample 1–2 days in captivity | 1 month | – | – | ↓ | ↑ (n.c.) | ( | |
| Herring gull ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | At-capture sample | 4 weeks | ↑ | ↑ | – | ↑ (n.c.) | ( | |
| Rufous-collared sparrows ( | Captive vs free-living population | Free-living population | 2 weeks | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ( | ||
| Reptiles | Garter snakes ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | At-capture sample and free-living population | 4 months | ↑ | ( | |||
| Amphibians | Cururu toad ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | At-capture sample | 3 months | ↑ | – | ( | ||
| Fijian ground frog ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | At-capture sample | 15 days | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ( | ||
| 25 days | – | – | – | ||||||
| Mole salamanders ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | At-capture sample | 10 days | – | ↓ | ↑ | ( | ||
| Fish | Kutum ( | Captive vs free-living population | Free-living population | 3 days | ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ (n.c.) | ( |
Timeframe refers to the longest duration of captivity measured. WBC = total white blood cells; H = heterophils; N = neutrophils; L = lymphocytes; n.c. = not calculated (in this case, a count or percentage of heterophils or neutrophils and lymphocytes was measured in the paper, but H or N:L ratio was not directly compared. Presence/direction of change in the rctypes); ↑ or ↓ = higher or lower than free-living; – = no change from free-living.
1Pattern only seen in rhinos translocated from high to low (not high to high) elevation.
2Total WBCs and N:L ratio also compared to free-living wild populations of a similar species—there was no difference.
3Comparison to values collected in another study and species (llamas and alpacas).
4Circulating leukocytes and skin-infiltrating leukocytes were measured. See text for skin leukocyte patterns.
Patterns of change in baseline and integrated GCs when wild animals are brought into captivity (this table does not include studies where the pattern was different in different seasons—those studies may be found in Table 6)
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| No effect on GCs over captivity period | Mammals | Degu ( | Captive vs free-living populations | >1 year | Free-living population | Plasma (<2 min) | ( |
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 20 weeks | None—first sample at week 1 of captivity | Plasma (<5 min) | ( | ||
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 8 weeks | None—unclear when first sample was obtained | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Harbor seal ( | Captive vs free-living populations | >4 weeks | Free-living animals | Plasma (wild: 60 min captive: < 10 min) | ( | ||
| Tuco-tuco ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 30 days | At-capture measure | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| Birds | European starling ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post- captivity | 4 weeks + | Feather grown in the wild | Feathers | ( | |
| Western screech owl ( | Captive vs free-living populations | >1 month | Free-living animals | Plasma (<5 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Up to 4 weeks | Free-living animals | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| Reptiles | Tuatara ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Unknown | Free-living population | Plasma (<20 min) | ( | |
| Kutum ( | Captive vs free-living populations | 3 days | Free-living population | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| GCs elevated in captivity | Mammals | Canada lynx ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Long term (unknown) | Free-living population | FGMs | ( |
| Spider monkey ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Long term (unknown) | Free-living population | FGMs | ( | ||
| African wild dog ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Long term (unknown) | Free-living population | FGMs | ( | ||
| Grevy’s zebra ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 6 weeks | At-capture sample; free-living population | FGMs | ( | ||
| White rhinos ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 75 days | At-capture sample | FGMs | ( | ||
| Birds | Curve-billed thrasher ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 80 days | At-capture samples | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | |
| White-crowned sparrow ( | Captive vs free-living populations | 35 days | Free-living population | Plasma (<1 min) | ( | ||
| White-throated sparrow ( | Captive vs free-living populations | 35 days | Free-living population | Plasma (<1 min) | ( | ||
| Blackbirds ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 22 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 7 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 7 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity (multiple seasons) | 5 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 66 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 24 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| Southern pied babblers ( | Captive vs free-living populations | 5 days | Free-living population | FGMs | ( | ||
| Reptiles | Tuatara ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Unknown | Free-living population | Plasma (<20 min) | ( | |
| Garter snake ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 4 months | At-capture sample; free-living population | Plasma (<10 min)4 | ( | ||
| Tree lizard ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Up to 3 weeks | At-capture samples | Plasma (<1 min) | ( | ||
| Water snake | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 5–8 days | At-capture samples | Plasma (<5 min) | ( | ||
| Brown treesnake ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | 3 days | Free-living population | Plasma (<8 min) | ( | ||
| Amphibians | Cururu toad ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 3 months | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | |
| Toad ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity | 60 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| Green frog ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints (multiple seasons) | 3 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<5 min) | ( | ||
| Fish | Coral reef fish ( | Captive vs free-living populations | 2.5 months | Free-living population | Plasma (<6 min) | ( | |
| Wedge sole ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | 45 days | At-hatching samples | Whole-body (time not given) | ( | ||
| GCs increase at-capture, then decrease to approach wild baseline | Mammals | Beluga whale ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak:1 day approach free-living by 4 days | At-capture sample and free-living population | Plasma (time not given) | ( |
| Chacma baboon ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: 4 weeks approach long-term captives by 7 weeks | None—used long term captives as baseline. | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| African green monkey ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Peak: 1 day approach free-living by 2 days | Free-living population | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Mouse lemur ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: 2 days approach free-living by 4 days | At-capture sample | FGMs | ( | ||
| Richardson’s ground squirrel ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: 3–5 days approach free-living by 6 days | At-capture sample | FGMs | ( | ||
| Bottlenose dolphin ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: 1 day approach long-term captive by 2 weeks | Long-term captives | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Birds | House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: Day 7 approach free-living by Day 11 | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | |
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: Days 1–2 approach free-living by 1 month | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| White-crowned sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: Days 1–2 approach free-living by Day 14 | At-capture sample | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Reptiles | Skink ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: 1 day–1 week approach free-living by 4 weeks | At-capture sample | Plasma (<1 min) | ( | |
| Amphibians | Water frog ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Peak: Day 1 approach free-living by Day 7 | Free-living populations | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | |
| Cane toad ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: Day 5 approach free-living by Day 12 | At-capture sample | Urine | ( | ||
| Cane toad ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: Day 4 approach free-living by Day 14 | At-capture sample | Urine | ( | ||
| Fijian ground frog ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Peak: Day 5 approach free-living by Day 25 | At-capture sample | Urine | ( | ||
| Fish | Flounder ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Peak: 1 hour approach free-living by Day 1 | Free-living animals | Plasma (<7 min) | ( | |
| Kahawai ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Peak: 2–3 hours approach free-living by Day 3 | Free-living animals | Plasma (<4 min) | ( | ||
| GCs lower in captivity | Mammals | Harbor porpoise ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Long term (unknown) | Free-living population | Plasma (time not given) | ( |
| Gilbert’s potoroo ( | Captive vs free-living populations | Long term (unknown) | Free-living population | FGMs | ( | ||
| Harbor seal ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Long term (unknown) | Free-living population | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Black rhino ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 60 days | At-capture sample | FGMs | ( | ||
| White whale ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 11 days | Long-term captives | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Birds | European starling ( | Captive vs free-living population | Unknown | Free-living population | FGMs | ( | |
| Chukar partridge ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 9 days | At-capture sample | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | ||
| Amphibians | Toad ( | Captive vs free-living population, multiple timepoints | Decreased from Days 30 to 60 | Free-living population | Plasma (<3 min) | ( | |
| High initial GCs decrease over capture period | Mammals | Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Decreased from Day 1 to 1 year | None—first sample after unknown time in trap. | Plasma (<50 min) | ( |
| Brushtail possums ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Decreased from Week 1 to 20 | None—first sample at Week 1 of captivity | Plasma (<5 min) | ( | ||
| Meadow vole ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Decreased from Day 1 to Day 70 | None—first sample at Day 1 | Plasma (<1 min) | ( | ||
| Vicuñas ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Decreased from at-capture to Day 12 | None—first sample after stressful capture (time not given) | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Eurasian otter ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Decreased from Days 2–5 to Days 5–10 | None—first sample at Days 2–5 | Plasma (time not given) | ( | ||
| Birds | Red knot ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Decreased from first sample to 2 years | None—first sample at day 70 | Plasma (3–38 min) | ( | |
| Fish | Red gurnard ( | Repeated measures; pre- vs post-captivity (different durations) | Decreased from first sample to 1 day | None—first sample after long line capture | Plasma (<2 min) | ( | |
| Snapper ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Decreased form at-capture to Day 2 | None—first sample after long line capture | Plasma (<10 min) | ( | ||
| Sardine ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | Decreased from at-capture to Day 2 | None—first sample after seine capture | Plasma (~3 min) | ( | ||
1Cortisol results only.
2No difference in GCs in females pre-breeding—GCs elevated in both sexes during breeding season.
3Captive population may include some captive-raised individuals.
4Blood sampling took longer in some samples.
5GC spike in many animals during first 2 weeks, but then drops well below at capture levels.
6GCs increased in non-calling toads, but sample sizes low.
7Some animals treated with long-acting neuroleptic, which had no effect on GC levels, so values were pooled.
*Data from this paper are incorporated into Fig. 3.
Seasonal effects of captivity
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| Baseline GCs | Mammals | Canada lynx ( | Free-living population | Long term (unknown) | − | ↑ | ( | ||
| Canada lynx ( | Free-living population | Long term (unknown) | ↑ | ↑ | ( | ||||
| Harbor seal ( | Free-living population | Long term (unknown) | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ( | |||
| Birds | White-crowned sparrow ( | Free-living population | 4 months at start | − | ↓ | ↑ | − | ( | |
| House sparrow ( | Same individual pre-capture | 5 days | ↑ | − | − | − | ( | ||
| Reptiles | Duvaucel’s gecoks ( | Free-living population | >1 year at the start | − | ↑ | − | ( | ||
| Tuatara ( | Free-living population | Unknown | ↑ | − | ( | ||||
| Tuatara ( | Free-living population | Unknown | − | − | ( | ||||
| Amphibians | Eastern red-spotted newt ( | Free-living population | 2 months to > 1 year | ↑ | ↑ | − | ( | ||
| Green frog ( | Same individual pre-capture | 3 days | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ( | |||
| Fish | Winter flounder ( | Free-living population | 2 months at start | ↓ | − | ( | |||
| Acute stress GCs | Birds | White-crowned sparrow ( | Free-living population | 4 months at start | − | ↓ | ↑ | − | ( |
| House sparrow ( | Same individual pre- capture | 5 days | − | − | − | ↓ | ( | ||
| Amphibians | Eastern red-spotted newt ( | Free-living population | >1 year | ↑ | ↑ | − | ( | ||
| Fish | Winter flounder ( | Free-living population | 2 months at start | − | − | ( | |||
| T | Mammals | Armadillos ( | Free-living population | 2 weeks–3 years | − | − | − | − | ( |
| Amphibians | Green frog ( | Same individual pre-capture | 3 days | ↓ | − | − | ( | ||
| Amphibian: green frog ( | Same individual pre-capture | 3 days | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ( | |||
| E2 | Amphibians | Amphibian: green frog ( | Same individual pre-capture | 3 days | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ( | |
| Amphibian: green frog ( | Same individual pre-capture | 3 days | − | − | ↓ | ( | |||
Arrows indicate direction of change in captive animals relative to an established free-living level. Captive and wild measurements were taken at the same time of year. GCs glucocorticoids; T testosterone; E2 estradiol.
1Delay in acquiring wild baseline.
Figure 3Change in baseline or integrated GCs as a function of captivity duration. Data were collected from the 47 studies listed in Table 3 that had a well-defined wild baseline value (i.e. plasma samples were collected within minutes of capture; fecal or urine samples were collected shortly after capture), with studies counted multiple times if they measured multiple time points after introduction to captivity. This figure does not include studies with seasonal effects on the GC response to capture.
Reproductive effects of captivity in wild animals (if multiple times of year were examined, only breeding season is included in this table)
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| Reproductive capacity decreased in captivity | Mammals | White rhino ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 75 days | Fecal T (males) and Progestin (females) | At-capture samples | ( |
| Black rhino ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 60 days | Fecal T (males) and progestin (females) | At-capture samples | ( | ||
| Mouse lemur ( | Pathology of dead captive animals | Variable—usually years in captivity | Histological examination of reproductive organs (follicular growth) | Reproductive pathology increased with captivity length | ( | ||
| Birds | Brown-headed cowbird ( | Captive vs free-living population | 6 months +3 months photostimulation | Gonad size and plasma T | Free-living population | ( | |
| House sparrow ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 3 months | Sperm production, beak color, testes size | At-capture samples and free-living population | ( | ||
| Reptiles | Brown treesnakes ( | Captive vs free-living population | 4–8 weeks | Sexual maturity (testes development) | Free-living population | ( | |
| Anole lizard ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | 4 weeks | Plasma vitellogenin; ovary state | Free-living population | ( | ||
| Tree lizard ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 3 weeks | Plasma T | At-capture samples | ( | ||
| Snapping turtle ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 1 week | Plasma T | At-capture sample | ( | ||
| Amphibians | Water frog ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 2 weeks | Plasma T and E2 | At capture samples | ( | |
| Water frog ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 3 days | Plasma T and E2 | At capture sample | ( | ||
| Toad ( | Captive vs free-living population, multiple timepoints | 1 week | Plasma T | Free-living population | ( | ||
| Toad ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 60 days | Plasma T | At-capture sample | ( | ||
| Fish | Jack mackerel ( | Captive vs free-living population | 1 year | Egg maturity, reproductive stage, gnrh gene expression | Free-living population | ( | |
| Electric fish ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 37 days | Sex-specific behaviors, plasma T and 11KT (males) | At capture samples | ( | ||
| Sardine ( | Captive vs free-living population | 4 weeks | Gonadosomatic index | Free-living population | ( | ||
| Red gurnard (Chelidonichthys kumu) (♀) | Multiple timepoints; different individuals AND repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 4 days | Plasma T, E2, egg development | Free-living population | ( | ||
| No difference in reproductive capacity in captivity | Mammals | Armadillos ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 3 years | Plasma T | Free-living population | ( |
| Birds | White-crowned sparrows ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to day 20 or 33 | Plasma LH, plasma T (males only) | At-capture sample | ( | |
| Reptiles | Striped plateau lizard ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | Up to 3 months | Plasma P, T and E2 | Free living population | ( | |
| Skink ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 4 weeks | Plasma T | At-capture samples | ( | ||
| Brown treesnake ( | Multiple timepoints; different individuals | 3 days | Plasma T and ovarian follicle development | Free-living population | ( | ||
| Amphibians | Water frog ( | Repeated measures; multiple timepoints | 2 weeks | Plasma T and E2 | At capture samples | ( | |
1Different photosimulation and social stimulation tested—maximal testicular regrowth (long days + females) still below wild, though in that group, T was the same as wild.
2Vitellogenin levels recovered by E2 use.
3T spikes during the first 24–48 hours of captivity, but decreases below at-capture levels.
4E2 spikes during first hours of captivity, but quickly decreases below at-capture levels.
5E2 higher in captive than wild.
6There was a transitory increase in LH at around Weeks 1–3 that came back to at-capture levels in multiple experiments.
7T lower in captivity, but only after egg-laying.
8E2 spike in first 6 hours of captivity but then returns to at-capture levels.