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1.
J Evol Biol ; 25(6): 1189-99, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22530630

ABSTRACT

Stressful situations during development can shape the phenotype for life by provoking a trade-off between development and survival. Stress hormones, mainly glucocorticoids, play an important orchestrating role in this trade-off. Hence, how stress sensitive an animal is critically determines the phenotype and ultimately fitness. In several species, darker eumelanic individuals are less sensitive to stressful conditions than less eumelanic conspecifics, which may be due to the pleiotropic effects of genes affecting both coloration and physiological traits. We experimentally tested whether the degree of melanin-based coloration is associated with the sensitivity to an endocrine response to stressful situations in the barn owl. We artificially administered the mediator of a hormonal stress response, corticosterone, to nestlings to examine the prediction that corticosterone-induced reduction in growth rate is more pronounced in light eumelanic nestlings than in darker nest mates. To examine whether such an effect may be genetically determined, we swapped hatchlings between randomly chosen pairs of nests. We first showed that corticosterone affects growth and, thus, shapes the phenotype. Second, we found that under corticosterone administration, nestlings with large black spots grew better than nestlings with small black spots. As in the barn owl the expression of eumelanin-based coloration is heritable and not sensitive to environmental conditions, it is therefore a reliable, genetically based sign of the ability to cope with an increase in blood corticosterone level.


Subject(s)
Corticosterone/administration & dosage , Melanins/physiology , Pigmentation/physiology , Signal Transduction , Stress, Physiological , Strigiformes/growth & development , Animals , Body Weight , Color , Corticosterone/blood , Corticosterone/pharmacology , Environment , Female , Genotype , Hormones/physiology , Male , Nesting Behavior , Phenotype , Strigiformes/genetics , Strigiformes/physiology , Wings, Animal/growth & development
2.
J Evol Biol ; 24(10): 2241-7, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21745253

ABSTRACT

The control mechanisms and information content of melanin-based colourations are still debated among evolutionary biologists. Recent hypotheses contend that molecules involved in melanogenesis alter other physiological processes, thereby generating covariation between melanin-based colouration and other phenotypic attributes. Interestingly, several molecules such as agouti and glutathione that trigger the production of reddish-brown pheomelanin have an inhibitory effect on the production of black/grey eumelanin, whereas other hormones, such as melanocortins, have the opposite effect. We therefore propose the hypothesis that phenotypic traits positively correlated with the degree of eumelanin-based colouration may be negatively correlated with the degree of pheomelanin-based colouration, or vice versa. Given the role played by the melanocortin system and glutathione on melanogenesis and resistance to oxidative stress, we examined the prediction that resistance to oxidative stress is positively correlated with the degree of black colouration but negatively with the degree of reddish colouration. Using the barn owl (Tyto alba) as a model organism, we swapped eggs between randomly chosen nests to allocate genotypes randomly among environments and then we measured resistance to oxidative stress using the KRL assay in nestlings raised by foster parents. As predicted, the degree of black and reddish pigmentations was positively and negatively correlated, respectively, with resistance to oxidative stress. Our results reveal that eumelanin- and pheomelanin-based colourations can be redundant signals of resistance to oxidative stress.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Melanins/metabolism , Oxidative Stress , Strigiformes/physiology , Animals , Color , Feathers/metabolism , Genotype , Melanins/physiology , Strigiformes/genetics , Strigiformes/metabolism
3.
J Evol Biol ; 23(10): 2046-2053, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20840305

ABSTRACT

Sex-dependent selection can help maintain sexual dimorphism. When the magnitude of selection exerted on a heritable sex trait differs between the sexes, it may prevent each sex to reach its phenotypic optimum. As a consequence, the benefit of expressing a sex trait to a given value may differ between males and females favouring sex-specific adaptations associated with different values of a sex trait. The level of metabolites regulated by genes that are under sex-dependent selection may therefore covary with the degree of ornamentation differently in the two sexes. We investigated this prediction in the barn owl, a species in which females display on average larger black spots on the plumage than males, a heritable ornament. This melanin-based colour trait is strongly selected in females and weakly counter-selected in males indicating sex-dependent selection. In nestling barn owls, we found that daily variation in baseline corticosterone levels, a key hormone that mediates life history trade-offs, covaries with spot diameter displayed by their biological parents. When their mother displayed larger spots, nestlings had lower corticosterone levels in the morning and higher levels in the evening, whereas the opposite pattern was found with the size of paternal spots. Our study suggests a link between daily regulation of glucocorticoids and sex-dependent selection exerted on sexually dimorphic melanin-based ornaments.


Subject(s)
Circadian Rhythm , Corticosterone/blood , Melanins/metabolism , Pigmentation , Strigiformes/blood , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Female , Male , Selection, Genetic , Sex Characteristics , Strigiformes/genetics
4.
J Evol Biol ; 23(5): 987-96, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20345817

ABSTRACT

Sexual selection theory posits that ornaments can signal the genetic quality of an individual. Eumelanin-based coloration is such an ornament and can signal the ability to cope with a physiological stress response because the melanocortin system regulates eumelanogenesis as well as physiological stress responses. In the present article, we experimentally investigated whether the stronger stress sensitivity of light than dark eumelanic individuals stems from differential regulation of stress hormones. Our study shows that darker eumelanic barn owl nestlings have a lower corticosterone release after a stressful event, an association, which was also inherited from the mother (but not the father) to the offspring. Additionally, nestlings sired by darker eumelanic mothers more quickly reduced experimentally elevated corticosterone levels. This provides a solution as to how ornamented individuals can be more resistant to various sources of stress than drab conspecifics. Our study suggests that eumelanin-based coloration can be a sexually selected signal of resistance to stressful events.


Subject(s)
Animal Communication , Inheritance Patterns/genetics , Melanins/metabolism , Pigmentation/physiology , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Strigiformes/physiology , Animals , Corticosterone/blood , Mating Preference, Animal/physiology , Models, Biological , Stress, Physiological/genetics , Strigiformes/genetics , Switzerland
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