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Physiological stress mediates the honesty of social signals

Extravagant ornaments used as social signals evolved to advertise their bearers' quality. The Immunocompetence Handicap Hypothesis proposes that testosterone-dependent ornaments reliably signal health and parasite resistance; however, empirical studies have shown mixed support. Alternatively, i...

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Published in:PloS one 2009-03, Vol.4 (3), p.e4983
Main Authors: Bortolotti, Gary R, Mougeot, Francois, Martinez-Padilla, Jesus, Webster, Lucy M I, Piertney, Stuart B
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c662t-8db373718bb584038e5d8a6618fd42726644883da3663b51c0feddd8a15429e53
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creator Bortolotti, Gary R
Mougeot, Francois
Martinez-Padilla, Jesus
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Piertney, Stuart B
description Extravagant ornaments used as social signals evolved to advertise their bearers' quality. The Immunocompetence Handicap Hypothesis proposes that testosterone-dependent ornaments reliably signal health and parasite resistance; however, empirical studies have shown mixed support. Alternatively, immune function and parasite resistance may be indirectly or directly related to glucocorticoid stress hormones. We propose that an understanding of the interplay between the individual and its environment, particularly how they cope with stressors, is crucial for understanding the honesty of social signals. We analyzed corticosterone deposited in growing feathers as an integrated measure of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity in a wild territorial bird, the red grouse Lagopus lagopus scoticus. We manipulated two key, interrelated components, parasites and testosterone, which influence both ornamentation and fitness. Birds were initially purged of parasites, and later challenged with parasites or not, while at the same time being given testosterone or control implants, using a factorial experimental design. At the treatment level, testosterone enhanced ornamentation, while parasites reduced it, but only in males not implanted with testosterone. Among individuals, the degree to which both parasites and testosterone had an effect was strongly dependent on the amount of corticosterone in the feather grown during the experiment. The more stressors birds had experienced (i.e., higher corticosterone), the more parasites developed, and the less testosterone enhanced ornamentation. With this unique focus on the individual, and a novel, integrative, measure of response to stressors, we show that ornamentation is ultimately a product of the cumulative physiological response to environmental challenges. These findings lead toward a more realistic concept of honesty in signaling as well as a broader discussion of the concept of stress.
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Birds were initially purged of parasites, and later challenged with parasites or not, while at the same time being given testosterone or control implants, using a factorial experimental design. At the treatment level, testosterone enhanced ornamentation, while parasites reduced it, but only in males not implanted with testosterone. Among individuals, the degree to which both parasites and testosterone had an effect was strongly dependent on the amount of corticosterone in the feather grown during the experiment. The more stressors birds had experienced (i.e., higher corticosterone), the more parasites developed, and the less testosterone enhanced ornamentation. With this unique focus on the individual, and a novel, integrative, measure of response to stressors, we show that ornamentation is ultimately a product of the cumulative physiological response to environmental challenges. 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subjects Adaptation, Physiological
Animal behavior
Animals
Behavior, Animal
Biology
Birds
Corticosterone
Corticosterone - analysis
Ecology/Behavioral Ecology
Ecology/Evolutionary Ecology
Ecology/Physiological Ecology
Empirical analysis
Enzymes
Experimental design
Feathers
Feathers - chemistry
Fitness
Galliformes - parasitology
Galliformes - physiology
Glucocorticoids
Honesty
Hormones
Host-Parasite Interactions - immunology
Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System
Hypothalamus
Immune response
Immunity
Immunoassay
Immunocompetence
Implants
Influence
Lagopus lagopus scotica
Male
Males
Morphology
Parasite resistance
Parasites
Physiological aspects
Physiology
Pituitary
Pituitary-Adrenal System
Sexual Behavior, Animal
Social Behavior
Stress
Stress (physiology)
Stress (Psychology)
Stress, Physiological - immunology
Stress, Physiological - physiology
Stresses
Testosterone
Testosterone - analysis
Trichostrongylus tenuis
title Physiological stress mediates the honesty of social signals
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