4.3 Article

Can concentrations of steroid hormones in brown bear hair reveal age class?

Journal

CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coy001

Keywords

Age class discrimination; brown bear; enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA); hair steroid hormone profile; non-invasive hair collection; Ursus arctos

Funding

  1. fRI Research Grizzly Bear Programme
  2. Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park Zoo
  3. Scandinavian Brown Bear Research Project
  4. Swedish Environmental Protection Agency
  5. Norwegian Environment Agency
  6. Austrian Science Fund
  7. Swedish Association for Hunting and Wildlife Management
  8. Alberta Innovates-Biosolutions [VCS-11-008]

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Although combining genetic and endocrine data from non-invasively collected hair samples has potential to improve the conservation of threatened mammals, few studies have evaluated this opportunity. In this study, we determined if steroid hormone (testosterone, progesterone, estradiol and cortisol) concentration profiles in 169 hair samples collected from free-ranging brown bears (Ursus arctos) could be used to accurately discriminate between immature and adult bears within each sex. Because hair samples were acquired opportunistically, we also needed to establish if interactions between hormones and several non-hormone factors (ordinal day, year, contact method, study area) were associated with age class. For each sex, we first compared a suite of candidate models by Akaike Information Criteria model selection, using different adult-age thresholds (3, 4 and 5 years), to determine the most supported adult age. Because hair hormone levels better reflect the endocrine state at an earlier time, possibly during the previous year, then at the time of sampling, we re-analysed the data, excluding the records for bears at the adult-age threshold, to establish if classification accuracy improved. For both sexes, candidate models were most supported based on a 3-year-old adult-age threshold. Classification accuracy did not improve with the 3-year-old bear data excluded. Male age class was predicted with a high degree of accuracy (88.4%) based on the concomitant concentrations of all four hormones. Female age class was predicted with less accuracy (77.1%) based only on testosterone and cortisol. Accuracy was reduced for females, primarily because we had poor success in correctly classifying immature bears (60%) whereas classification success for adult females was similar to that for males (84.5%). Given the small and unbalanced sample used in this study, our findings should be viewed as preliminary, but they should also provide a basis for more comprehensive future studies.

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