The relative speed of the glucocorticoid stress response varies independently of scope and is predicted by environmental variability and longevity across birds.

ElsevierVolume 144, August 2022, 105226Hormones and BehaviorHighlights•

Relatively little is known about variation in the speed of the stress response.

We asked whether and how the speed of the response varies across species.

The scope and speed of response were positively correlated.

Faster responses were associated with short lifespans and variable environments.

The speed of stress responses may be an important determinant of coping ability.

Abstract

The acute glucocorticoid response is a key mediator of the coordinated vertebrate response to unpredictable challenges. Rapid glucocorticoid increases initiate changes that allow animals to cope with stressors. The scope of the glucocorticoid response — defined here as the absolute increase in glucocorticoids — is associated with individual differences in performance and varies across species with environment and life history. In addition to varying in scope, responses can differ enormously in speed; however, relatively little is known about whether speed and absolute glucocorticoid levels covary, how selection shapes speed, or what aspects of speed are important. We used corticosterone samples collected at 5 time points from 1750 individuals of 60 species of birds to ask i) how the speed and scope of the glucocorticoid response covary and ii) whether variation in absolute or relative speed is predicted by environmental context or life history. Among species, faster absolute glucocorticoid responses were strongly associated with a larger scope. Despite this covariation, the relative speed of the glucocorticoid response (standardized within species) varied independently of absolute scope, suggesting that selection could operate on both features independently. Species with faster relative glucocorticoid responses lived in locations with more variable temperature and had shorter lifespans. Our results suggest that rapid changes associated with the speed of the glucocorticoid response, such as those occurring through non-genomic receptors, might be an important determinant of coping ability and we emphasize the need for studies designed to measure speed independently of absolute glucocorticoid levels.

Keywords

Stress

Corticosterone

Comparative physiology

Evolutionary endocrinology

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