4.6 Article

The sensitive hare: sublethal effects of predator stress on reproduction in snowshoe hares

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
卷 78, 期 6, 页码 1249-1258

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2009.01552.x

关键词

10-year snowshoe hare cycle; glucocorticoid metabolites; maternal effects; natural populations; predation risk

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development
  3. EJLB Foundation
  4. Arctic Institute of North America
  5. University of Calgary
  6. University of British Columbia Animal Care Committee
  7. Canadian Council for Animal Care

向作者/读者索取更多资源

P>1. Prey responses to high predation risk can be morphological or behavioural and ultimately come at the cost of survival, growth, body condition, or reproduction. These sub-lethal predator effects have been shown to be mediated by physiological stress. We tested the hypothesis that elevated glucocorticoid concentrations directly cause a decline in reproduction in individual free-ranging female snowshoe hares, Lepus americanus. We measured the cortisol concentration from each dam (using a faecal analysis enzyme immunoassay) and her reproductive output (litter size, offspring birth mass, offspring right hind foot (RHF) length) 30 h after birth. 2. In a natural monitoring study, we monitored hares during the first and second litter from the population peak (2006) to the second year of the decline (2008). We found that faecal cortisol metabolite (FCM) concentration in dams decreased 52% from the first to the second litter. From the first to the second litter, litter size increased 122%, offspring body mass increased 130%, and offspring RHF length increased 112%. Dam FCM concentrations were inversely related to litter size (r2 = 0 center dot 19), to offspring birth mass (r2 = 0 center dot 32), and to offspring RHF length (r2 = 0 center dot 64). 3. In an experimental manipulation, we assigned wild-caught, pregnant hares to a control and a stressed group and held them in pens. Hares in the stressed group were exposed to a dog 1-2 min every other day before parturition to simulate high predation risk. At parturition, unsuccessful-stressed dams (those that failed to give birth to live young) and stressed dams had 837% and 214%, respectively, higher FCM concentrations than control dams. Of those females that gave birth, litter size was similar between control and stressed dams. However, offspring from stressed dams were 37% lighter and 16% smaller than offspring from control dams. Increasing FCM concentration in dams caused the decline of offspring body mass (r2 = 0 center dot 57) and RHF (r2 = 0 center dot 52). 4. This is the first study in a free-ranging population of mammals to show that elevated, predator-induced, glucocorticoid concentrations in individual dams caused a decline in their reproductive output measured both by number and quality of offspring. Thus, we provide evidence that any stressor, not just predation, which increases glucocorticoid concentrations will result in a decrease in reproductive output.

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