Effects of faecal inorganic content variability on quantifying glucocorticoid and thyroid hormone metabolites in large felines: implications for physiological assessments in free-ranging animals

Author(s):  
Shiv Kumari Patel ◽  
Suvankar Biswas ◽  
Sitendu Goswami ◽  
Supriya Bhatt ◽  
Bivash Pandav ◽  
...  
2006 ◽  
Vol 114 (7) ◽  
pp. 1024-1031 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maki Tabuchi ◽  
Nik Veldhoen ◽  
Neil Dangerfield ◽  
Steven Jeffries ◽  
Caren C. Helbing ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (10) ◽  
pp. 2174-2180 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hamr ◽  
G. A. Bubenik

Blood samples from killed and livetrapped deer of southern and central Ontario were analyzed for thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3). Mean seasonal levels for six sex-age classes of deer ranged from 150 to 400 ng/dL (T3) and from 6.0 to 18.0 μg/dL (T4). Seasonal variation of T4 was less pronounced than that of T3. Both hormones decreased in the fall as compared with spring and summer, especially in yearling and older bucks. T3 values were also low in the winter but increased in spring and summer for most tested categories of deer. Differences in seasonal T3 and T4 concentrations were found between male and female deer older than 1 year, and among sex-age classes of the same sex. Regional differences in thyroid hormone levels suggested a latitudinal gradient, with higher values in southern than in central Ontario. Hormone of artificially fed deer were elevated when compared with animals that consumed only natural browse. Hormone levels were also higher in deer provided with food supplements of higher protein content. Extremely low winter T3 and T4 concentrations were found in malnourished deer. It is concluded that thyroid hormones in deer blood are influenced by current food intake and quality of nutrition. The potential for T3 and T4 as indicators of range quality is discussed.


2000 ◽  
Vol 203 (23) ◽  
pp. 3631-3637 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.M. Ortiz ◽  
D.S. MacKenzie ◽  
G.A. Worthy

Because thyroid hormones play a critical role in the regulation of metabolism, the low metabolic rates reported for manatees suggest that thyroid hormone concentrations in these animals may also be reduced. However, thyroid hormone concentrations have yet to be examined in manatees. The effects of captivity, diet and water salinity on plasma total triiodothyronine (tT(3)), total thyroxine (tT(4)) and free thyroxine (fT(4)) concentrations were assessed in adult West Indian manatees (Trichechus manatus). Free-ranging manatees exhibited significantly greater tT(4) and fT(4) concentrations than captive adults, regardless of diet, indicating that some aspect of a captive existence results in reduced T(4) concentrations. To determine whether this reduction might be related to feeding, captive adults fed on a mixed vegetable diet were switched to a strictly sea grass diet, resulting in decreased food consumption and a decrease in body mass. However, tT(4) and fT(4) concentrations were significantly elevated over initial values for 19 days. This may indicate that during periods of reduced food consumption manatees activate thyroid-hormone-promoted lipolysis to meet water and energetic requirements. Alterations in water salinity for captive animals did not induce significant changes in thyroid hormone concentrations. In spite of lower metabolic rates, thyroid hormone concentrations in captive manatees were comparable with those for other terrestrial and marine mammals, suggesting that the low metabolic rate in manatees is not attributable to reduced circulating thyroid hormone concentrations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Pujade Busqueta ◽  
Daniel E Crocker ◽  
Cory D Champagne ◽  
Molly C McCormley ◽  
Jared S Deyarmin ◽  
...  

Abstract Evaluating the impacts of anthropogenic disturbance on free-ranging marine mammal populations, many of which are in decline, requires robust diagnostic markers of physiological stress and health. However, circulating levels of canonical ‘stress hormones’ such as glucocorticoids, which are commonly used to evaluate animal health, do not capture the complexity of species-specific responses and cannot be easily measured in large, fully aquatic marine mammals. Alternatively, expression of stress-responsive genes in hormone target tissues such as blubber, the specialized subcutaneous adipose tissue that can be manually or remotely sampled from many marine mammals, may be a more informative and sensitive indicator of recent (within 24 h) exposure to stressors. We previously identified genes that were upregulated in the inner blubber of juvenile northern elephant seals during experimental stimulation of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis. In this study, we measured baseline expression levels of a subset of these genes in inner blubber of unmanipulated juvenile elephant seals of varying physiological states and correlated them with other stress markers (body condition index, corticosteroid and thyroid hormone levels). Expression of 10 genes, including those associated with lipid metabolism (ACSL1, HMGCS2, CDO1), redox homeostasis (GPX3), adipokine signaling (ADIPOQ), lipid droplet formation (PLIN1, CIDEA) and adipogenesis (DKK1, AZGP1, TGFBI), was described by three principal components and was associated with cortisol and thyroid hormone levels. Significantly, baseline gene expression levels were predictive of circulating hormone levels, suggesting that these markers may be potential indicators of exposure to stressors in marine mammal species that are inaccessible for blood sampling. A similar approach may be used to identify species-specific stress markers in other tissues that can be sampled by remote biopsy dart from free-ranging marine mammals, such as outer blubber and skin.


2012 ◽  
Vol 46 (16) ◽  
pp. 9027-9037 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulien J. Mulder ◽  
Elisabeth Lie ◽  
Grethe S. Eggen ◽  
Tomasz M. Ciesielski ◽  
Torunn Berg ◽  
...  

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