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First published online April 18, 2008
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 1414-1425 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.014290
Effects of maternal carotenoid availability in relation to sex, parasite infection and health status of nestling kestrels (Falco tinnunculus)
1 Departamento Biología Animal, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de
Granada, C/Fuentenueva s/n, 18071 Granada, Spain
2 Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias
Naturales-CSIC, C/José Gutiérrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid,
Spain
3 Departamento de Biotecnologia de Alimentos, Instituto de la Grasa-CSIC, Avda.
Padre Garcia Tejero 4, 41012 Sevilla, Spain
4 GIR Diagnostics S.L., C/San Andrés 2, 28180 Torrelaguna Madrid,
Spain
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: ldeneve{at}ugr.es)
Accepted 2 March 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: antioxidants, maternal effects, lipoproteins, globulins, heterophile, lymphocyte, nematodes, coccidia
| INTRODUCTION |
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However, animals are unable to synthesize carotenoids de novo, and
their availability in food is often limited (e.g.
Hill, 1990
;
Hill, 1992
). Therefore they
make a good candidate for mediating life-history trade-offs. The availability
of carotenoids in birds may be compromised by challenges to an individual's
health, as is shown by associations with condition
(Bortolotti et al., 1996
;
Hill and Montgomerie, 1994
),
exposure to parasites
(Alonso-Álvarez et al.,
2004
; Figuerola et al.,
1999
; Hõrak et al.,
2004a
; Møller et al.,
2000
), environmental contamination
(Camplani et al., 1999
;
Eeva et al., 1998
) and
carotenoid-based coloration (e.g. Arriero
and Fargallo, 2006
; Blount et
al., 2003b
; Fitze et al.,
2003
; Fitze et al.,
2007
; Martínez-Padilla
et al., 2007
; Møller et
al., 2000
). Birds fighting infections also often have reduced
levels of carotenoids in plasma and in integument
(Alonso-Álvarez et al.,
2004
; Hõrak et al.,
2004b
; Hõrak et al.,
2007
; Martínez-Padilla
et al., 2007
; Saino et al.,
1999
). The transfer of carotenoids into yolk may therefore have to
be traded against their allocation to maternal maintenance, what makes
carotenoid availability of fundamental importance during reproduction for
laying females (Blount, 2004
).
Actually, egg-laying capacity has been shown to be limited by carotenoid
availability (Blount et al.,
2004
), and Bertrand et al.
(Bertrand et al., 2006
)
recently demonstrated that carotenoid availability can modulate the trade-off
between egg production and resistance to oxidative stress. Also, as expected,
experimentally increased dietary intake of carotenoids before laying always
increased the concentration in egg yolk, not only in captive birds (e.g.
Bortolotti et al., 2003
;
Surai and Sparks, 2001
;
Surai and Speake, 1998
), but
also in several species of natural bird populations
(Berthouly et al., 2007
;
Biard et al., 2005
;
Blount et al., 2002a
;
Blount et al., 2002b
;
Ewen et al., 2006
;
McGraw et al., 2005
;
Reme
et al., 2007
;
Royle et al., 2003
),
suggesting that carotenoid availability might be generally limited for
breeding females.
Furthermore, prenatal developmental conditions may affect sons and
daughters differentially, resulting in sex-biased mortality and/or
sex-specific effects on offspring phenotype influencing offspring fitness
(e.g. Müller et al.,
2005
). In general, the more susceptible sex will have the greater
variability in reproductive success and thus provide higher fitness returns in
favourable environments. Therefore, mothers may increase their own
reproductive success by investing more into the sex that provides the greater
fitness return under the given environmental conditions (e.g.
Badyaev et al., 2002
;
Sheldon et al., 1998
;
Trivers and Willard, 1973
).
Sex-specific vulnerability has been attributed to different nutritional
requirements and thereby different vulnerability to poor nutritional
conditions (Gorman and Nager,
2004
; Griffiths,
1992
; Torres and Drummond,
1997
) (reviewed by Fargallo et
al., 2006
), but is also affected by sexual differences in gonadal
hormone production, and the sex-specific organization of physiology,
endocrinology, immunity and postnatal behaviour
(Balthazart and Adkins-Regan,
2003
). In fact, different vulnerability to yolk concentrations of,
for example, testosterone and/or corticosterone have recently been detected in
different species (Love et al.,
2005
; Müller et al.,
2005
; Naguib et al.,
2006
). However, to our knowledge, only one study on a natural bird
population evaluated possible sexual differences in the impact of maternally
transmitted carotenoids on offspring phenotype, which found that great tit
(Parus major) male hatchlings from carotenoid-supplemented mothers
were heavier than their sisters (Berthouly
et al., 2008
).
Evidence of the effect of an increase in maternally transmitted carotenoids
on offspring performance in wild bird populations is very scarce and
inconsistent up to now. Although a positive effect of yolk carotenoids on
nestling tarsus length was found in blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus)
(Biard et al., 2005
), this was
found not to be the case in the closely related great tits
(Reme
et al., 2007
),
norin barn swallows (Hirundo rustica)
(Saino et al., 2003a
). A
beneficial effect of maternally transmitted carotenoids on cellular immunity
was only detected in barn swallows (Saino
et al., 2003a
), whereas results with great tits are confusing
(Berthouly et al., 2007
;
Reme
et al., 2007
).
Effects on hatching and fledgling success were only studied on zebra finch
(Taeniopygia guttata) populations in captivity, one finding a
positive effect (McGraw et al.,
2005
), but in the other no such effect was apparent
(Bertrand et al., 2006
). These
minor effects of an increase in yolk carotenoids on offspring performance
might be explained by high natural abundance of carotenoids or other
antioxidants in the adult and nestling diet. Additionally, conflicting results
of different studies may be explained by species-specific features of their
life-histories. Therefore, it might be interesting to study carotenoid
supplementation in species where carotenoid availability is typically limited
in the diet. In this sense, raptors are a good model because as carnivores
they are predicted to have difficulty in acquiring carotenoids
(Olson, 2006
;
Olson and Owens, 1998
;
Tella et al., 2004
).
In this study, we explore sex-related effects of an increase in carotenoid
availability before egg laying on nestling health status in Eurasian kestrels
(Falco tinnunculus Linnaeus 1758), a sexually dimorphic raptor in
which adult females are 20% heavier than adult males
(Massemin et al., 2000
). In
this small raptor, there may be a potential trade-off between diet quality and
quantity, since carotenoid pigment coloration was associated with the
consumption of invertebrates but not voles in adult Eurasian kestrels
(Casagrande et al., 2006
), and
in the closely related adult American kestrels (Falco sparverius)
carotenoid levels in birds nesting in territories with more voles were lower
(Bortolotti et al., 2000
). We
supplemented a group of females with dietary carotenoids (xanthophylls) 3
weeks before the start of egg laying until clutch completion, maintaining
another group as control. We evaluated the effect of a pre-laying
supplementation with carotenoids on female, hatchling and fledgling
circulating carotenoids. Furthermore, we evaluated the effect on body
condition and health status in females and fledglings by means of a series of
haematological condition parameters [albumin and globulin concentrations,
albumin to globulin ratio (nutritional status), lymphocyte and heterophile
concentrations, heterophile to lymphocyte ratio (stress indicator),
high-density lipoprotein (HDL – good cholesterol lipoprotein) to
low-density lipoprotein (LDL – bad cholesterol lipoprotein) ratio]. In
addition, we evaluated the intestinal parasite burden diversity in nestling
faeces and the nestling cell-mediated immunity (CMI) using the
phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) skin test, which has become a standard method of
assessing cell-mediated components of the immune response in birds
(Smits et al., 1999
;
Tella et al., 2002
).
As was stated above, according to the role that carotenoids play during embryonic development, we expect that the carotenoid treatment of the mothers will benefit the development of the different physiological systems of their chicks, over those of the control group.
With respect to a potential sex-related effect, previous studies showed
that especially under conditions of food scarcity, male kestrel nestlings, the
smaller sex, have lower competitive ability
(Fargallo et al., 2003
) and
thereby produce a lower cell-mediated immune response than their female
nest-mates (Fargallo et al.,
2002
; Fargallo et al.,
2003
; Fargallo et al.,
2007
). For that reason, here we predict male nestlings to be more
stressed compared to female nestlings [higher heterophile to lymphocyte (H:L)
ratio (e.g. Laaksonen et al.,
2004
; Moreno et al.,
2002
; Ots et al.,
1998
)]. In addition, Berthouly et al.
(Berthouly et al., 2007
) found
that during increased stress situations early in life, maternally transmitted
carotenoids seem to be more important for the development of a competent
cellular immunity in nestlings than their overall nutritional status. It can
be expected that male kestrels, facing a more stressed situation during the
nestling phase, may be more susceptible to a change in the micro-nutritional
developmental environment than females; and thereby could benefit more from an
increased maternal carotenoid investment. In that case, these benefits should
be reflected in better health state parameters in male nestlings enjoying an
increase in maternally transmitted carotenoids compared to control males.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Data collection and experimental protocol
We performed a food supplementation experiment prior to laying, starting on
the 4th April, which was 25 days before the first egg was found in the
population, thereby covering more than enough the period required for egg
formation in this species (9 days) (see
Meijer et al., 1989
). During
the same breeding season of 2005, simultaneous observational studies were
performed during the pre-laying period in relation to agonistic behaviour
(Vergara and Fargallo, 2007
;
Vergara et al., 2007
). Those
observations started before the carotenoid supplementation experiment, and the
day the experiment started, 41 of the finally 45 (91%) breeding pairs were
established. To each nest box we assigned an experimental treatment
(carotenoid vs control) in an alternating way, so that treatments
were randomly distributed over the study area. We used 1/8 of farmed Japanese
quail (Coturnix c. japonica; 15 g) to administer the carotenoids, and
the same amount of quail without carotenoids was supplied to the control
group. It is known from previous studies that kestrels absorb predominantly
lutein, which is an oxygenated carotenoid, i.e. a xanthophyll
(Casagrande et al., 2006
).
These carotenoids were kindly supplied by Kemin Foods (Herentals, Belgium;
OroGlo Layer Dry 20) in the form of a dietary supplement made of crystalline
lutein derived from marigold flowers. Xanthophyll concentration in the product
was 1.8% lutein (0.2% isomers) in free alcohol forms readily available for
absorption (Biard et al.,
2005
; Blount et al.,
2002b
). We treated each piece of quail with a mix of 0.2 ml of
vegetable oil and 5 mg of carotenoids, and control pieces were treated with
0.2 ml of oil only. Nest boxes were visited every 2 days, and the quail piece
was left in the nest box according to the given treatment. All pieces
disappeared every two days. In kestrels, once the pairs are established,
females usually remain in the territory while males go out hunting to feed
them (Village, 1990
), so that
food supplements placed in the nest boxes were most likely consumed by the
females (Martínez-Padilla and
Fargallo, 2007
).
At the beginning of the food supplementation, it is likely that some
control pairs ate some carotenoid supplemented quails. We did not eliminate
carotenoids from the diet of control pairs, which access these components also
through their natural diet; but we increased carotenoid availability for
females in the carotenoid group because as the pre-laying period advances,
females stay more and more time in the nest surroundings and they are very
aggressive against other females in nest proximities
(Vergara and Fargallo, 2007
;
Vergara et al., 2007
).
Food supplementation continued until 4 days after clutch completion, and the subsequent day we captured females at the nest box while incubating. In that way we could compare female parameters at the same stage of their breeding period. We measured body mass and structural size (wing, tail and tarsus length) and took a blood sample (1 ml) from the brachial vein. The blood was placed in a 1.5 ml Eppendorf tube containing EDTA buffer. Two smears were made immediately after extraction and were fixed with absolute ethanol within 12 h. All blood samples were stored in a cooling bag in the field, and when back in the lab, plasma was separated from blood cells by centrifugation and stored at –20°C upon analysis. Blood cells were conserved in absolute ethanol for analysis of nestling sex.
Nests were visited daily when hatching date was reached. Blood samples
(50–100 µl) were taken from hatchlings (0–1 days old) by means
of brachial vein puncture with a heparinized capillary, and the birds were
then weighed and marked with indelible ink. Nestlings were then remarked every
5 days until banding. Nestling kestrels fledge when they are about 31 days old
(range 25–36 days, N=15)
(Bustamante, 1994
). When
nestlings reached the age of 25 days, we took fledgling body measurements and
a blood sample (1 ml extracted from the brachial vein with a syringe). Blood
samples of hatchlings and fledglings were handled in the same way as
previously described for females. In addition, we used a phytohaemagglutinin-P
(PHA) injection assay to evaluate in vivo the combined responses of
T-cells, cytokines and inflammatory cells (cell-mediated immunity, hereafter
CMI). Kestrel chicks were injected intradermally in the wing web with 0.3 mg
of PHA dissolved in 0.1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline (see
Fargallo et al., 2002
). During
the handling of nestlings, a faecal sample was taken from each one.
Laboratory analyses
Sex determination
The sex of chicks was determined from blood samples with molecular methods
as described previously (Fridolfsson and
Ellegren, 1999
) applied on kestrels
(Fargallo et al., 2002
).
Intestinal parasite burdens
Fresh faecal samples from each fledgling were examined by the direct
flotation method using a zinc sulphate solution to identify Nematoda (genera
Espiurida, Capillaria and Porrocaecum) and Cestoda
(Clyde and Patton, 2001
;
Greiner and Ritchie, 1994
).
For the coccidian genera, we sporulated the oocysts with 2.5% potassium
dichromate for 14 days for proper identification of Eimeria,
Caryospora and Isospora
(Forbes and Fox, 2005
).
Leukocyte count
White blood cell count (WBC) was determined with an improved Neubauer
hemocytometer and Natt & Herrick solution in white cell dilution pipettes.
Blood smears were stained with Diff-Quick stain, and 400 leukocytes were
differentiated on each smear (Campbell,
1995
; Wernery et al.,
2004
). The total count of heterophiles and lymphocytes was
determined as the percentage of heterophiles (or lymphocytes, respectively) of
the total leukocyte count of the blood smear multiplied by the WBC.
Lymphocytes are immune cells that assist in the recognition and destruction
of many types of pathogens and a decreased lymphocyte number likely signals
stress-induced immunosuppression and higher susceptibility to viral infections
(Hõrak et al., 1998
;
Ots et al., 1998
). By
contrast, heterophiles are phagocytosing cells and their concentration
increases during inflammatory processes, stress and infections [Coles in
Kilgas et al. (Coles, 1997
;
Kilgas et al., 2006a
)]. The
heterophile to lymphocyte (H:L) ratio is often used as a stress estimator in
domestic and wild birds (Maxwell and
Robertson, 1998
; Moreno et
al., 2002
; Ots et al.,
1998
; Ots and Hõrak,
1996
), including kestrels
(Laaksonen et al., 2004
;
Martínez-Padilla et al.,
2004
), and was also recently shown to be related to survival
probability in adult great tits (Kilgas et
al., 2006b
).
Plasma analyses
Plasma carotenoid concentration
The system employed is based on that used by Negro and
Garrido-Fernández (Negro and
Garrido-Fernández, 2000
). In each plasma sample, the
carotenoid pigment content was analyzed in duplicate. For each replicate, 20
µl of plasma was taken and placed into an Eppendorf tube containing 80
µl of acetone (HPLC grade). The closed tube containing the mixture of
sample and acetone was vortexed for 1 min and later sonicated in an ultrasonic
bath for 1 min. Finally the sample was centrifuged for 5 min at 17500
g. The system of separation used was that described by
Mínguez-Mosquera and Hornero-Méndez
(Mínguez-Mosquera and
Hornero-Méndez, 1993
) for carotenoid pigments in fruits and
lately used for carotenoid pigments separation from plasma
(Negro et al., 2002
). The
method uses a reverse-phase column (Spherisorb ODS2) of 25 cm in length, 0.46
cm internal diameter, and with a particle size of 5 µm. Separation was
performed using an acetone-water binary gradient with a flow of 1.5 ml
min–1. The volume of sample injected was 20 µl, and
detection was performed at 450 nm using a fixed-wave UV–visible
detector. Carotenoid pigments were identified by comparing their retention
time and spectral data under the elution conditions with those obtained using
pure standards (Goodwin, 1976
;
Mínguez-Mosquera and
Hornero-Méndez, 1993
). The individual concentrations of the
carotenoid pigments in plasma samples were determined by comparing the area of
each peak in the chromatogram with the areas of the calibration curve obtained
using pure standards (Fig. 1).
Results (in mg l–1) are presented as the average of two
measurements.
|
-, β- and
-globulins) of the kestrels
(Vergara et al., 2008
Plasma proteins provide important transport, immune and energy functions
(Hõrak et al., 1998
;
Hõrak et al., 2002
;
Ots et al., 1998
). Albumin is
the largest single fraction of protein in the blood, and is generally
considered a robust indicator of nutritional condition
(Hõrak et al., 2002
;
Jenni-Eiermann and Jenni,
1998
). A decrease in albumin concentration in the blood plasma
accompanies almost any diseases and malnutrition
(Jenni-Eiermann and Jenni,
1998
; Ots et al.,
1998
). Furthermore, an increase in globulin concentration is
expected after chronic or acute infections with inflammatory processes, and
therefore, healthier individuals have a higher albumin to globulin ratio
(Ots et al., 1998
), which was
also found to be related to survival probability in a natural population of
adult great tits (Kilgas et al.,
2006b
).
Lipoproteins in the blood, a water-based medium, carry triglycerides,
cholesterol and carotenoids around the body, and generally, in healthy
individuals the LDL fraction is low and HDL fraction high
(Krinsky, 1994
;
Rock, 1997
).
Statistical analyses
The effect of the treatment on female plasma carotenoid composition and
concentrations was investigated using a MANOVA with the general linear model
(GLM). The initial models concerning females always included laying date and
clutch size as covariates in order to account for possible seasonal variation
and differences in reproductive investment. Other reproductive and female
variables were analysed with ANOVA (GLM procedure).
General mixed linear models (GLMM) were used with the proc mixed (SAS
1989-96 Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) procedure to analyse nestling
characteristics and generalized linear mixed models (GLIMMIX procedure) to
analyse the presence or absence (binomial error, link=logit) of intestinal
parasites (Littell et al.,
1996
). The initial models testing the effect of treatment (fixed
effect) on nestling characteristics always included the fixed factor sex and
the covariates brood size and hatching date, in order to account for seasonal
variation, sibling competition and sexual differences and/or dimorphism. In
addition, the interaction sex*treatment tested if the effect of the
treatment was similar in both sexes. Nest-identity (nested within treatment)
was included as a random factor in order to account for random variation due
to the nest. Furthermore, the interaction nest-identity*sex was
included as a second random factor. In this way pseudo replication was avoided
since in each nest two blocks according to each sex were considered as
independent points and not each individual nestling (see degrees of freedom
from analyses). However, in some cases the interaction did not account for any
variation, and the model then used nestlings as independent cases.
Interactions and main effects were sequentially dropped from the model when
not significant. Models were compared with the Akaike's information criterion
(AIC), and the most parsimonious was retained (lowest AIC)
(Burnham and Anderson, 1998
).
Degrees of freedom for type 3 tests of fixed effects were calculated using the
Satterthwaite method. Tests of the residuals for normality and
homoscedasticity were used to check the validity of the model, and dependent
variables were transformed to meet these constraints if needed. The means of
least square means between treatments or sexes were compared with adjusted
P values using the Scheffé method.
Values are reported as means ± s.e.m.
| RESULTS |
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We were able to capture and obtain all measurements from 34 females, 5 days after clutch completion (18 control and 16 carotenoid).
The breeding pairs of the carotenoid group tended to start breeding earlier, but clutch size, egg size, hatching success (% eggs hatched) and fledging success (% hatchlings fledged) did not differ between the two groups (Table 1).
|
Breeding females
Females did not differ in body mass (GLM F1,30=0.32,
P=0.57; carotenoid, 244.1±4.2 g; control, 246.1±3.9 g),
tarsus length (GLM F1,30=0.04, P=0.84;
carotenoid, 49.63±0.43 mm; control, 49.75±0.37 mm) or wing
length (GLM F1,30=0.78, P=0.38; carotenoid,
25.39±0.17 cm; control, 25.17±0.16 cm) between treatments. The
covariables laying date and clutch size were not significant in any case (all
P>0.19).
Female plasma carotenoids consisted mainly of lutein, with small proportions of β-carotene, cis-lutein and β-criptoxanthin (Table 2). The pre-laying carotenoid supplementation significantly affected female plasma carotenoid concentrations (MANOVA: Wilk's lamda=0.69, F4,27=3.08, P=0.032, N=34), whereas laying date and clutch size were not significant (P>0.8). Univariate results showed that the carotenoid supplementation mainly increased the concentration of female plasma lutein (F1,30=12.51, P=0.001), but also β-carotene (F1,30=5.20, P=0.029), cis-lutein (F1,30=6.89, P=0.013) and β-criptoxanthin (F1,30=4.66, P=0.034) were significantly increased (Fig. 2).
|
|
The supplement also significantly affected circulating lipoproteins. The HDL:LDL ratio was higher in carotenoid-supplemented females compared to control ones (F1,30=10.69, P=0.0026; carotenoid, 2.12±0.12; control, 1.54±0.14). The covariables laying date and clutch size were not significant (all P>0.12).
The carotenoid supplement did not significantly affect plasma protein titres (all P>0.18) or white blood cell counts (all P>0.32). Laying date and clutch size did not significantly affect these variables (all P>0.38).
Hatchlings
Hatchling mass was negatively affected by laying date (GLMM
F1,35.9=9.99, P=0.0032) and marginally negatively
by clutch size (GLMM F1,36=3.55, P=0.067).
Controlling for sex, no significant between-group differences were observed in
hatchling body mass, or the interaction treatment
sex
(P>0.78).
|
Fledglings
Body size measurements and cell-mediated immunity
The treatment did not affect fledgling body mass (GLMM
F1,32.6=0.02, P=0.89;
Fig. 4A), tarsus length (GLMM
F1,32.3=0.02, P=0.88,
Fig. 4B) or wing length (GLMM
F1,32.3=0.02, P=0.88;
Fig. 4C). In the model with CMI
as a dependent variable, we also included nestling body mass as covariate
(Fargallo et al., 2002
). Only
nestling body mass was retained in the model
(F1,142=13.44, P=0.0003). Treatment, sex, or
their interaction did not significantly affect nestling CMI (GLMM all
P>0.14; Fig.
4D).
|
Plasma carotenoids
Fledgling plasma carotenoids consisted of 94.1±0.4% lutein
(Table 2) and laying date
correlated negatively with lutein plasma concentration (GLMM
F1,30.3=6.49, P=0.016), and showed a positive
non-significant correlation with tarsus length (GLMM
F1,98.7=3.68, P=0.058). The experimental
treatment did not explain significant variation in plasma lutein concentration
in fledglings (GLMM F1,31.3=0.71, P=0.40; see
Fig. 3) and there were no
differences between the sexes (GLMM F1,86.3=0.94,
P=0.33; males, 20.45±1.45; females, 19.08±1.38;
Fig. 3).
Furthermore, cis-lutein was negatively explained by laying date (GLMM F1,30.6=10.48, P=0.003), but no variables included in the initial model explained significant variation in β-criptoxantin or β-carotene concentrations in fledglings (all P>0.23).
Plasma proteins
The total globulin concentrations were negatively correlated with fledgling
body mass (GLMM F1,80.1=13.22, P=0.0005) and the
interaction treatment
sex also explained significant variation (GLMM
F3,47.4=5.14, P=0.0037;
Fig. 5A). In the control group,
males and females did not differ in globulin levels (post-hoc
Scheffé test: P=0.98), whereas in the carotenoid group, males
showed lower globulin levels than females (post-hoc Scheffé
test: P=0.004; Fig.
5A). Males did not significantly differ in globulin levels between
the carotenoid and control group (post-hoc Scheffé test:
P=0.17).
|
treatment
F2,121=0.16, P=0.85;
Fig. 5B). Owing to the
significant effect on globulin concentrations, also the interaction
treatment
sex significantly explained variations in albumin to globulin
ratio (GLMM F3,79.4=3.93, P=0.011;
Fig. 5C), other variables were
excluded from the model (all P>0.09). In the control group, males
and females did not differ in albumin to globulin ratios (post-hoc
Scheffé test: P=0.93), but in the carotenoid group, males
showed higher albumin:globulin ratios compared to females (post-hoc
Scheffé test: P=0.018; Fig.
5C). Although male nestlings from the carotenoid group tended to
have higher albumin to globulin ratios compared with male nestlings from the
control group, this difference was not significant.
Leucocytes
Male fledglings had less lymphocytes in plasma than female fledglings (GLMM
F1,145=6.10, P=0.015;
Fig. 6A), and fledglings from
the carotenoid group had higher lymphocyte counts than fledglings from the
control group (GLMM F1,33.9=5.24, P=0.028;
Fig. 6A). Heterophiles were
negatively correlated with CMI (GLMM F1,62=4.82,
P=0.031, N=142), but their variation was not explained by
the treatment or nestling sex (GLMM treatment: F1,30=0.67,
P=0.42; sex F1,26.8=0.71, P=041;
Fig. 6B). The heterophile to
lymphocyte ratio was higher in males compared to female nestlings (GLMM
F1,22.4=6.22, P=0.02, N=148;
Fig. 6C), but the treatment
only showed a non-significant effect on the heterophile to lymphocyte ratio,
with lower ratios in the carotenoid group (GLMM F1,30.4
=2.05, P=0.16; Fig.
6C).
|
Intestinal parasite prevalence
Fledgling kestrels had a mean of 1.9±0.9 (range: 0–5)
different intestinal parasite groups. The percentage of fledglings infected
with the studied parasite groups is given in
Fig. 7. The carotenoid
treatment significantly affected the number of studied intestinal parasite
groups that were found in each kestrel fledgling (GLMM
F1,26.6=5.20, P=0.03, N=131; carotenoid,
1.7±0.1; control, 2.2±0.1). From the seven different parasite
groups studied, only the prevalence of the nematode genus Capillaria
was significantly lower in the carotenoid compared to the control group
(GLIMMIX F1,28.5=8.36, P=0.0073, N=131;
carotenoid, 41%; control, 68%). Also the prevalence of the nematode genus
Porrocaecum tended to be lower in the carotenoid compared to the
control group (GLIMMIX F1,129=3.12, P=0.08,
N=131; carotenoid, 30%; control, 46%). No significant differences in
the prevalence of the nematode genus Espiurida, and the coccidian
genera Eimeria, Caryospora and Isospora were found between
treatments (all P>0.23). The other explanatory variables: sex, the
interaction sex*treatment, laying date and brood size, did not
affect significantly the number or presence of parasite groups (all
P>0.23).
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
By contrast, carotenoid supplementation did not affect female body mass, as
it did, for example, in blue tits (Biard
et al., 2005
) and zebra finches
(Alonso-Álvarez et al.,
2004
). We also did not find significant differences between
experimental groups in laying date, clutch size, hatching and fledging
success. As mentioned before (see Introduction), discrepancies in the effects
of pre-laying carotenoid supplementation on reproductive parameters probably
indicate interactions with other environmental parameters that differed
between studies and species.
Hatchlings
The transfer of carotenoids to eggs has been repeatedly shown to be
determined by their availability in the mothers' diet, and experiments
involving carotenoid provisioning always produced a significant increase in
egg yolk carotenes compared with the control group (e.g.
Biard et al., 2005
;
Bortolotti et al., 2003
;
Karadas et al., 2005
;
Koutsos et al., 2003
;
Reme
et al., 2007
;
Schaeffer et al., 1998
;
Surai et al., 2003
;
Surai et al., 1998
). In
addition, maternal circulating carotenoids showed a significant correlation
with the mean clutch concentration of carotenoids in poultry
(Schaeffer et al., 1998
) and
gulls (Blount et al., 2002b
).
We allowed all eggs to hatch and young to be raised with the objective of
exploring the effects of pre-laying carotenoid supplementation on nestling
performance without altering nest composition or brood size. Our experiment
largely increased kestrel female plasma carotenoid status compared with
control females, but we did not find this effect reflected in hatchling plasma
lutein concentrations. During embryonic development, carotenes are transferred
from the egg yolk mainly to the liver, and at hatching, the concentration of
carotenoids in the liver far exceeds that of any other tissue
(Surai et al., 2001b
;
Surai and Speake, 1998
).
Post-hatch, the liver then undergoes a dramatic depletion in carotenoids that
are redistributed among other tissues, including the plasma. In addition, the
liver carotenoid content is very sensitive to changes in yolk carotenoid
levels, whereas the other tissues of the embryo are much less responsive
(Surai and Speake, 1998
).
Even though a significant effect of pre-laying carotenoid supplementation was
previously detected in the plasma of hatchling chicks
(Surai and Speake, 1998
), the
fact that it in our experiment there was no difference in the hatchling plasma
lutein concentrations was probably due to the fact that carotenoids were still
mainly stored in the liver at that age, with very low concentrations of
circulating plasma carotenoids (see Table
2). If blood samples had been taken form older hatchlings
differences in blood plasma carotenoids might have been apparent. We opted for
taking blood samples from hatchlings as early as possible with the aim of
detecting the transfer of maternal carotenoid availability, excluding as much
as possible an environmental component. This is because cross-fostering
experiments in American kestrels showed that plasma carotenoids of nestlings
at 22 days were mainly environmentally determined
(Bortolotti et al., 2000
).
Fledglings
The prelaying carotenoid supplement given to females affected their
fledgling leucocytes and plasma protein concentrations, and also resistance to
intestinal parasites. However, we did not detect significant effects of the
treatment on fledgling circulating carotenoids, body mass, body size and CMI.
As stated before, plasma carotenoids of the closely related American kestrel
fledglings were mainly environmentally determined
(Bortolotti et al., 2000
), as
was also the case for yellow-legged gulls (Larus michahellis)
(Rubolini et al., 2006
). In
addition, in nestling kestrels, plasma carotenoid concentration has been shown
to vary between different bird families
(Costantini et al., 2007
), and
were increased when nestlings were supplemented with carotenoids
(Casagrande et al., 2007
;
Costantini et al., 2007
).
However, this effect disappeared 1 week after the supplementation
(Costantini et al., 2007
) or
once it became apparent in skin colouration, indicating a quick reduction of
the pigments after involvement in physiological processes
(Casagrande et al., 2007
).
Therefore, plasma carotenoid concentrations of fledglings most likely
reflected their actual diet and since experimental nests were randomly
distributed in the study area, no differences in diet between the experimental
groups are expected. Moreover, plasma carotenoid concentrations were
negatively related to laying date and positively to tarsus length, suggesting
a major influence of parental quality. The prelaying carotenoid
supplementation did not affect fledgling body size or mass. Previous findings,
as mentioned in the Introduction, together with the present study, suggest
that the effect of yolk carotenoids on post-hatch growth is not ubiquitous,
and is most likely dependent on other environmental interactions.
Cell-mediated response was not significantly affected by the treatment or
by sex or the interaction sex
treatment. In natural and experimental
situations of food shortage, nestling male kestrels have generally shown a
lower cell-mediated immune response than their female nest-mates
(Fargallo et al., 2002
;
Fargallo et al., 2003
;
Fargallo et al., 2007
). In
accordance with these previous findings,
Fig. 4D shows the trend of
males having a lower CMI than females in the control group, however, this
difference did not reach significance using a Scheffé post-hoc
adjustment. Up to now, very few studies have evaluated possible effects of
maternal carotenoids on nestling cell-mediated immunity measured by PHA
injection (Berthouly et al.,
2007
; Reme
et al.,
2007
; Saino et al.,
2003a
), and a significant result has only been found in a study
where lutein was directly injected into the eggs of barn swallows
(Saino et al., 2003a
). Here
we did not find an effect on cell-mediated immunity; however, the carotenoid
treatment significantly lowered the number of intestinal parasite groups that
were found in each kestrel fledgling. However, the treatment did not help
nestlings avoid infection by coccidian parasites; but it did lower the
prevalence of nematodes. Both nematode and coccidian infections may have
detrimental effects on an individual's health and fitness
(Brawner et al., 2000
;
Calvete, 2003
;
Draycott et al., 2006
;
Forbes and Simpson, 1997
;
Georgieva et al., 2006
;
Hill and Brawner, 1998
;
Hõrak et al., 2004a
).
Recently, Dalloul et al. (Dalloul et al.,
2006
) found that the injection of a lectin extracted from a
mushroom into chicken embryo's had an immunoenhancing effect on cell-mediated
immunity and coccidiosis. To our knowledge this is the first study showing a
lowered intestinal parasite infestation due to different environmental
conditions experienced during ontogeny in a wild bird population, thereby
supporting the idea that maternal effects may exert considerable effects on an
individual's capability to respond to immune challenges later in life.
Unfortunately, we do not have information on the severity of infestation by
intestinal parasites. A recent experimental study
(Hõrak et al., 2006b
)
demonstrated individual variation in resistance to coccidiosis in
greenfinches, but it was not determined if this was caused by genetic or
ontogenetic differences in immune function. If nestlings of carotenoid
supplemented females enjoyed a more optimal development, which allowed them to
better resist parasitic infections later in life, it is possible that these
nestlings maintained lower levels of infection compared to control nestlings
(Hõrak et al.,
2006b
).
Furthermore, nestlings of carotenoid-supplemented females showed higher
lymphocyte concentrations. Carotenoids decrease immunosuppressive peroxides,
and enhance the production of lymphocytes and the phagocytic ability of
heterophiles and macrophages (reviewed by
Lozano, 1994
;
Møller et al., 2000
;
Surai et al., 2001a
). The
higher concentration of lymphocytes in kestrel nestlings of
carotenoid-supplemented females may indicate that these nestlings were able to
develop their immune system more rapidly, as was previously also suggested for
blue tit nestlings from carotenoid enriched eggs
(Biard et al., 2005
). Because
of the higher lymphocyte concentration in nestlings from the carotenoid group,
these also tended to have a lower H:L ratio, indicating lower stress compared
to the control group. This result supports the recent suggestion in a study on
great tits that the beneficial effects of maternally transmitted carotenoids
may be mediated by their positive direct or indirect influence on
physiological and behavioural processes involved in stress resistance and
competitiveness (Berthouly et al.,
2007
).
Aside from this effect, in both experimental groups, male nestlings showed
lower lymphocyte numbers and a higher H:L ratio compared to female nestlings.
Lymphocyte number in the peripheral blood is known to decrease in response to
different stressors, and particularly after exhausting physical activities
[e.g. Hoffman-Goetz and Pedersen in Hõrak et al.
(Hoffman-Goetz and Pedersen,
1994
; Hõrak et al.,
1998
)]. In raptors, male nestlings are smaller than females,
suggesting that males are in competitive disadvantage under conditions of food
scarcity (Anderson et al.,
1993
; Fargallo et al.,
2003
). Therefore, males are most likely suffering from more
intensive sibling competition compared to females, provoking their more
stressed situation (less lymphocytes, higher H:L ratio).
Furthermore, the experiment also affected nestling plasma protein
concentrations. Based on albumin concentrations, kestrel nestlings did not
differ in nutritional condition between experimental groups
(Hõrak et al., 2002
;
Jenni-Eiermann and Jenni,
1998
). But the experimental treatment did affect globulin
concentrations, although only in the male nestlings
(Fig. 5). Since an increase in
globulin concentration is expected after chronic or acute infections with
inflammatory processes, healthier individuals have a higher albumin to
globulin ratio (Ots et al.,
1998
; Kilgas et al.,
2006b
).
In the present study, male nestlings of carotenoid-supplemented females showed the highest albumin to globulin ratio, being healthier than males from the control group. Female nestlings did not differ in albumin to globulin ratio between experimental groups, and sexual differences were only manifested in the carotenoid supplemented group.
Sexual differences in kestrel nestling condition and/or CMI have been
interpreted as a reduced competitive capacity of male nestlings, the smaller
sex (Fargallo et al., 2003
),
or also as a result of different hormonal configuration of both sexes
(Fargallo et al., 2002
).
However, this last possibility was refuted in a recent experimental study
(Fargallo et al., 2007
).
Another alternative could be that prenatal environmental conditions drive
sexual differences in physiological processes because the sexes may differ in
their vulnerability and/or sensitivity to specific egg components for their
normal development (Gorman and Nager,
2004
; Love et al.,
2005
; Naguib et al.,
2006
; Naguib and Gil,
2005
). In this sense, our results of globulin levels indicate that
an increased maternal investment in lutein benefited males but had no effect
on females.
Although we find benefits of maternal carotenoids for both sexes in
fighting off intestinal parasites and the development of the immune system
(leucocytes), we cannot know if increased pre-laying carotenoid availability
caused a sex-biased maternal investment
(Saino et al., 2003b
;
Verboven et al., 2005
) or if
a general increase in the investment of carotenoids in the total clutch
benefited more males than females post hatch with respect to globulin
levels.
We are aware that with the presented experimental design, effects of
maternal investment per se and post hatch parental care on fledgling
health status cannot be distinguished since we did not perform the usually
employed cross-fostering experiments to address these questions (e.g.
Biard et al., 2005
). We
believe that parental quality was randomly distributed among experimental
groups, since the experiment was randomly distributed along the study area,
90% of the territories were established before the experiment started and no
significant differences in reproductive parameters were found between
treatments. However, carotenoid availability may have influenced egg
investment and thereby nestling performance, but it could have also influenced
parental care; our manipulation, however, was mainly directed towards females
before and during egg-laying. Prey-provisioning during incubation and the
first two weeks post-hatch is exclusively performed by the male, and even
afterwards, the contribution of males in nestling provisioning largely
outweighs that of females (Tolonen and
Korpimäki, 1994
) (Vergara and Fargallo, in press). Then,
during the manipulation period, males spent most of their time hunting to feed
breeding females. Unless the carotenoid treatment had some effect on egg
colouration or on female behaviour, which could potentially influence male
behaviour, it is not expected that there would be any effect of the experiment
on male parental care, and thereby on nestling rearing conditions. We did not
monitor male feeding frequency during the nestling period, but during the
post-fledging period, parents did not differ in feeding behaviour between
treatments (Vergara and Fargallo, in press). For these reasons, we believe
that the results of our study most likely indicate that maternal investment in
carotenoids at least altered in some way post-hatch nestling physiological
health state parameters. In addition, a recent study on great tits found that
the effect of maternally transmitted carotenoids on nestling immune response
depended on whether nestlings had been cross-fostered or not, and the study
concluded that carotenoid supplementation compensated for the
immunosuppressive consequence of nestling translocation
(Berthouly et al., 2007
). This
indicates that although cross-fostering is a good tool for distinguishing
between pre-and post-natal environmental effects, it is not free from
additional complications. In fact, Reme
et al.
(Reme
et al., 2007
)
did not mention the lack of cross-fostering experiments in their study in
order to evaluate maternal carotenoid supplementation effects on nestling
performance.
In conclusion, prelaying carotenoid supplementation to kestrel females increased adult female plasma carotenoid concentrations and altered the HDL:LDL ratio. The effect of the treatment of prelaying female was manifested in several nestling haematological health state parameters and in nestling intestinal parasite burden. Nestlings of carotenoid-supplemented females had a lower number of intestinal parasite groups, higher lymphocyte concentrations, and were less stressed than control nestlings. In addition, interactions between treatment and sex were apparent for globulin concentrations, favouring male nestlings, suggesting sex-specific benefits from carotenoid maternal investment in kestrels.
| Acknowledgments |
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