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First published online May 1, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 1477-1482 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.022152
Tracking stress: localisation, deposition and stability of corticosterone in feathers
1 Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada S7N
5E2
2 Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC), 41092 Sevilla,
Spain
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: gary.bortolotti{at}usask.ca)
Accepted 1 February 2009
| Summary |
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Key words: feathers, stress physiology, glucocorticoids, fault bars, time frame
| INTRODUCTION |
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Recently, Bortolotti et al. reported that CORT, the main avian
glucocorticoid, can be measured reliably in feathers
(Bortolotti et al., 2008
). The
levels of CORT in feathers represent an integration of HPA activity over a
substantially longer period of time (days-to-weeks) than previously analysed
using conventional blood sampling. Such results were found to be biologically
meaningful for interpreting how individual birds respond to environmental
perturbations and adjust to various life history stages
(Bortolotti et al., 2008
). In
the present study, we ask a series of questions to further investigate the
nature of CORT in feathers, with an emphasis on how one might monitor stress
over time or evaluate it retrospectively, ultimately for a better
understanding of its causes and consequences. We first explore in detail how
the amount of CORT may vary along the length of individual feathers to give
insight into how the hormone is incorporated into the feather, and to
determine to what degree its localisation in the feather can be used to reveal
when and how birds respond to stressors. We show that tracking stress over a
number of time scales is possible at the level of the individual and
population.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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The feathers from wild birds used for this study were obtained from dead birds stored in a –20°C freezer for about a year, from museum specimens (University of Saskatchewan Biology Museum, Saskatoon, Canada), from freshly moulted feathers or, in the case of the great horned owl (Bubo virginianus Gmelin), a feather was pulled from live birds (see below). Details of the samples and a test for the potential effect of feather age on CORT are presented below.
How is CORT deposited in a feather?
It is imperative to understand how feathers grow and thus how CORT may be
deposited for it is only during growth that this hormone may be incorporated
into feathers (Bortolotti et al.,
2008
). The feather follicle is a tubular array of cells that is
highly vascularised during growth. Growth rate for much of the length of the
feather is at a relatively uniform rate (e.g.
Bortolotti, 1984a
;
Bortolotti, 1984b
) and at any
point along the rachis, the vane on both sides, completely to the edge, is
grown at the same time. Therefore, to capture the temporal nature of CORT
deposition, one must cut feathers perpendicular to the rachis. Equal lengths
of feathers from distal to proximal therefore represent approximately equal
time periods.
To examine trends in CORT from proximal to distal along individual remiges
(flight feathers of the wing), we used five freshly moulted feathers of bald
eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus Linnaeus) collected from under nests
at Besnard Lake, Canada (Gerrard and
Bortolotti, 1988
) between 1979 and 1982 and three primaries of a
dead eagle in juvenal plumage (i.e. feathers were grown simultaneously as a
nestling). The considerable length of eagle feathers, coupled with the
availability of detailed knowledge of their growth rate
(Bortolotti, 1984a
;
Bortolotti, 1984b
), proved to
be ideal for investigating patterns of CORT deposition. Segments 21 mm long
were cut from these bald eagle remiges. Avoiding the worn tip, 10 segments
from three feathers and 12 segments from two feathers were cut at right angles
to the rachis.
To enhance the likelihood that within-feather patterns revealed in the analysis of bald eagle feathers could be generalised to other birds, we analysed remiges from five other species: prairie falcon (Falco mexicanus Schlegel), great horned owl, snow goose (Chen caerulescens Linnaeus), sandhill crane (Grus canadensis Linnaeus) and Swainson's hawk (Buteo swainsoni Bonaparte). These species were chosen in part because of availability and the ease of working with large feathers and also because they represented variation in body mass (approximately 0.6–4 kg), diet (carnivore, omnivore and herbivore) and habitat (terrestrial and wetland). A remige from the same position in the wing from one adult and one juvenile of the same sex were analysed for each species. Feathers were cut into three equal-length segments. We examined the proximal to distal variation in CORT in the rachis only to avoid the complication of varying degrees of vane asymmetry. The potential variation due to vane asymmetry was examined using the most proximal segment of each of these feathers.
Can punctuated stress events be identified?
For some time it has been known that stress is recorded in feathers in the
form of fault bars – visible deformities (generally <1 mm in
diameter) in the barbs running at approximately right angles to the rachis,
which are believed to be caused by exposure to a variety of short-term
stressors such as handling or bad weather
(Bortolotti et al., 2002
;
Jovani and Blas, 2004
). Only
recently have they been found to be associated with a bird's fitness potential
(Bortolotti et al., 2002
).
Using the bald eagle remiges, we examined whether such punctuated stress
associated with fault bars could be detected using feather CORT.
Is CORT in feathers stable?
If CORT is to be compared among feathers it must be shown that it does not
degrade appreciably over time or after exposure to the environment. To get
some appreciation for whether CORT degraded, we analysed feathers from frozen
carcasses of birds that had died relatively recently (<1 year before
analysis in 2004) and those taken from the same age, sex and species as museum
specimens collected between 1931 and 1972 (age=51±4.1 years, mean
± s.e.m.). We plucked a contour feather from the belly of 13 species
representing a variety of birds: great horned owl, snow goose, sandhill crane,
great blue heron (Ardea herodeas Linnaeus), mallard (Anas
platyrhynchos Linnaeus), northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis
Linnaeus), gray partridge (Perdix perdix Linnaeus), American coot
(Fulica americana Gmelin), peregrine falcon (Falco
peregrinus Tunstall), snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus Linnaeus),
ruffed grouse (Bonasa umbellus Linnaeus), Franklin's gull (Larus
pipixcan Wagler) and western grebe (Aechmophorus occidentalis
Lawrence).
In addition, we experimentally tested the stability of CORT by comparing segments of vane under ambient conditions with those exposed to 75°C for 30 min in a drying oven. We chose heat, in part, as it is one environmental variable that the feathers from most species would probably experience while still on the birds, it should increase the rate of degradation if indeed it was occurring and if proved unimportant it would be convenient for researchers to simply store dry feathers without regard to ambient conditions. Five remiges were pulled from one wing of each carcass of a sandhill crane, prairie falcon, great blue heron, Swainson's hawk, great horned owl, short-eared owl (Asio flammeus Pontoppidan), Canada goose (Branta canadensis Linnaeus), redhead (Aythya americana Eyton), Franklin's gull, Northern shoveler (Anas clypeata Linnaeus) and common raven (Corvus corax Linnaeus). The vanes of each feather were removed and kept separate from each other. The strands of vane were then separated from each other and mixed thoroughly within the individual feather sample. Each mixture was divided into 10 replicates, five of which were heated while the others remained as a control.
Variation within a population
To examine within-population variation and population variation over time,
we collected back feathers from great horned owls from the vicinity of
Saskatoon, Canada. In 2005 we collected one upper back feather from 45
carcasses of birds that died in 2004 and 2005 and whose carcasses were kept
frozen. Although most specimens lacked information, the cause of death was
typically suspected to be collision with a vehicle or simply found dead
(likely to be starvation or, in two cases, birds tested positive for West Nile
virus). Also in 2004 and 2005, a feather was collected from 10 live, wild owls
obtained from various sources, e.g. trapped accidentally inside a building,
captured by a bander. For comparison with these recent samples, we collected
two back feathers (CORT averaged for analyses) from 21 museum specimens
collected between 1931 and 1974 (1959.7±2.63, mean ± s.e.m.),
also in the vicinity of Saskatoon. Of these latter birds, 15 date from the
1960s when they were pole-trapped as pests at a pheasant game farm. Sex was
taken from museum labels (N=2 with no data) or determined by
inspection of gonads or by DNA found in the feather (Doñana Biological
Station, Seville, Spain) (Horvath et al.,
2005
).
Hormone analyses
A methanol-based extraction technique was used to extract CORT from
feathers [complete details including validation of the methodology are
presented in Bortolotti et al. (Bortolotti
et al., 2008
)]. The feather minus the calamus was first minced
into pieces of <5x5 mm with scissors. Ten millilitres of methanol
(HPLC grade, VWR International, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) was added and
the samples were placed in a sonicating water bath at room temperature for 30
min, followed by incubation at 50°C overnight in a shaking water bath. The
methanol was then separated from feather material by vacuum filtration, using
a plug of synthetic polyester fibre in the filtration funnel. The feather
remnants, original sample vial and filtration material were washed twice with
approximately 2.5 ml of additional methanol; the washes were added to the
original methanol extract. The methanol extract was placed in a 50°C water
bath and subsequently evaporated in a fume hood. Evaporation of the samples
was completed within a few hours and the extract residues were reconstituted
in a small volume of the phosphate buffer system (PBS; 0.05 mol
l–1, pH 7.6) used in the CORT radioimmunoassay
(Blas et al., 2005
). The
filtration step was generally found to be sufficient to remove feather
particulates but further particulate material could be removed, if needed, by
centrifugation of the PBS-reconstituted samples. Reconstituted samples were
frozen at –20°C until analysed for CORT. The efficiency of methanol
extraction was assessed by including feather samples spiked with a small
amount (approximately 4000 d.p.m.) of 3H-corticosterone in each
extraction. Greater than 90% of the radioactivity was recoverable in the
reconstituted samples.
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
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We tested the validity of concentration (pg mg–1) versus a temporal expression of CORT (pg mm–1) using natural sources of variation within five individual bald eagle feathers. For each of the five feathers cut into 10 or more segments of 21 mm, Spearman correlations showed that distal (segment number 1) to proximal position was always highly correlated with concentration (range rs=–0.720 to –0.939, Ps<0.008) whereas we did not detect any significant correlations for length (range rs=0.042–0.442, Ps>0.20). The amount of keratin per unit of length of a feather increases from distal to proximal as there is typically more mass of vane and because the rachis widens. CORT per mg clearly declined from distal to proximal (Fig. 1A) whereas no such pattern existed for CORT per mm (Fig. 1B). We cannot envision a biological explanation for the consistent distal to proximal variation in feather CORT (Fig. 1A). Instead, day-to-day variation in response to stressors should cause CORT to go up and down within the individual as shown in Fig. 1B. Note as well the large differences in inherent variation between concentration (Fig. 1A, a 5.9-fold range) and length (Fig. 1B, a 2.3-fold range).
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Bortolotti et al. found that feather CORT values correlated with maximal
values of plasma CORT after an experimentally induced stress rather than
baseline CORT (Bortolotti et al.,
2008
). Therefore, as one would expect, CORT values for individual
feathers (Fig. 1B) reveal
considerable within- and among-individual variation in exposure and/or
response to stressors. The coefficients of variation (c.v.) averaged 15.7%
(±1.6 s.e.m., range, 11–19%) for five feathers from breeding
eagles and were 21%, 23% and 24% from three feathers grown concurrently on one
individual while it was a nestling. The magnitude of the c.v. for this
physiological trait is relatively high, considering that c.v. for
among-individual variation for such a variable attribute as asymptotic body
mass was 4% and for bill length it was 2% (calculated for data on
N=47 eaglets) (Bortolotti,
1984b
).
|
Both Figs 1 and 2 suggest that mass drives the concentration by a dilution effect. To further examine this, avoiding the distal to proximal variation, we analysed the inner (trailing edge) versus the outer (leading edge) vane in the most proximal segment of the 10 remiges of the five species analysed above (i.e. only one comparison per feather). Feathers are naturally asymmetrical with the mass of the outer vane less than the inner vane. CORT in the outer vane was significantly different from the inner vane only for concentration (Wilcoxon paired test Z=–2.599, P=0.009 for concentration and Z=–0.866, P=0.386 for length). Collectively, the results presented here confirm that CORT is deposited in feathers in a time-dependent not mass-dependent fashion, and so the appropriate means of quantifying this hormone is per length of feather and not by concentration. Furthermore, these findings emphasise that the sampling of just part of a feather must include the rachis and entire vane, edge-to-edge perpendicular to the rachis to obtain all of the hormone deposited at any one point in time.
Identification of punctuated stress events
We used paired t-tests to compare two consecutive 21 mm sections
of eagle feather. First using feathers that had fault bars, there was
significantly more CORT in the length of a segment with one or more fault bars
than in the adjacent section without bars (t=–2.192,
P=0.049, N=13). Using these same feathers but comparing two
sections lacking stress marks, there was no difference in CORT
(t=1.053, P=0.317, N=11). Turning to other eagle
feathers for which there were no fault bars at all along the entire feather,
there was similarly no difference in CORT between two randomly selected
consecutive sections (t=–0.466, P=0.658,
N=7). These results should be considered as being very conservative
in representing the technique's ability to resolve spikes in CORT. The
sections we used spanned approximately three days of growth, even though the
CORT pulse of induced stress associated with the event that caused a fault bar
may have only lasted a matter of hours or minutes. Given that we do not know
what stressor caused the fault bar, one must be cautious in interpreting or
inferring causality. However, even if fault bars and CORT are not causally
related, the bars should be good markers of stressful events and this is what
seems to show up in the analysis of feather hormones.
Stability of CORT in feathers
While old feathers (>25 years) (Fig.
1) clearly contain measurable levels of CORT, the amount of
hormone at the time of growth could not of course be known. From our sampling
protocol, there was no evidence for museum specimens having less CORT as would
be expected if degradation occurs (paired t-test,
t=–0.1.41, P=0.184, N=13 pairs of fresh and
old feathers per species). In fact, the mean for fresh carcasses
(4.4±0.45 pg mm–1, mean ± s.e.m.) was somewhat
less than that for museum specimens (5.4±0.49 pg mm–1,
mean ± s.e.m.).
Feather CORT was also remarkably resistant to degradation by heat. We evaluated the effect of the heat treatment using generalised linear mixed models (GLIMMIX, SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). The dependent variable used was CORT concentration (pgmg–1), which presented a gamma-type error distribution and a log-link function. The independent variable was treatment and we considered species as a random variable. There was no significant effect of the heat treatment on CORT (F1,98=0.23, P=0.6359) (Fig. 3). An added benefit of this protocol is that it would sterilise zoonotic pathogens and thus increase security to investigators and local animals if the feathers were imported. Presently, heating feathers for 75°C for 20 min is required by Canadian regulations for the importation of feathers.
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Population variation
We first tested for variation attributable to the state at sampling (alive
or carcass) and sex of the recent samples (2004–2005) of great horned
owls. There was no effect of sex (F1,48=1.218,
P=0.275) nor was there an interaction
(F1,48=0.524, P=0.473) but the difference between
birds that were alive and dead approached significance
(F1,48=3.649, P=0.062) with the former having a
higher level of CORT. There was no sex difference within the museum sample
(F1,18=0.066, P=0.800) so all historic specimens,
i.e. including the two with no sex information, were compared with the recent
samples (F2,73=61.62, P<0.0001)
(Fig. 4). Our intention here
was merely to explore some potential sources of variation within a population
(sex, alive versus dead and over time) and so a thorough
investigation of causality is not appropriate. However, these results may
suggest that either great horned owls are different today than they were 50
years ago or possibly a bias exists because of sampling. The museum specimens
were either shot or pole-trapped and thus likely to be relatively healthy,
free-flying birds. The more recent sample was probably more marginal members
of the population. The fact that feather CORT from carcasses tended to be
lower than that from living birds supports this interpretation. It is of
interest that the only individual of the 2004–2005 sample that
overlapped in CORT with the distribution of museum specimens was the only
recent bird known to have been shot.
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Second, a considerably longer time line is possible by comparing among feathers grown at different times on an individual bird. Provided the growth rates of the type of feather are known or feathers of similar size and morphology are used (e.g. contours of the breast or back), then weeks or months of CORT record would be available. Repeated plucking of a feather, e.g. on the same position on the wing or tail, also allows one to get such an extended time line.
Third, many large species of birds such as Procellariiforms, Gruiforms, Falconiforms and Strigiforms do not undergo a complete annual moult of remiges. Individuals of such species can simultaneously possess feathers grown in three different calendar years, thus providing a remarkably long-term perspective into variation in CORT available from just one sampling point in time for the investigator.
Fourth, because exposure to CORT may have long-lasting physiological
consequences, at least during development
(Monaghan, 2008
), there may
also be causal links between CORT exposure at one point in time and a similar
or different type of response at some point in the future. Therefore,
researchers may have some insight on future or past events and how birds deal
with them. When one considers extending sampling from within to among
individuals, new ecological questions can be asked concerning population-level
consequences of stress or CORT as a bioindicator of avian, or even ecosystem,
health. Of particular value may be long-term monitoring of populations, or
historical trends in CORT using museum specimens
(Fig. 4), from the perspective
of interpreting the significance of environmental change.
| Footnotes |
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