ABSTRACT
Pig homeostasis is challenged by stressful production practices, like road transportation. Glucocorticoids (GCs) are mediators of reactive homeostasis, and their concentrations are frequently used as a stress indicator. The adrenocortical activity of fattening female and castrated male pigs was monitored over a 5-day longitudinal study. A bi-factorial experimental design was applied on day 2; 18 pigs in pen 1 were transported for 3 h (T; 1.2 m2/pig), and 18 pigs were kept in pen 2 (NT). Ten pigs from each pen were treated with dexamethasone (T-D or NT-D), and eight with saline solution (T-SS or NT-SS). Adrenocortical activity was assessed by measuring the levels of faecal glucocorticoid metabolites (FGMs) and hair cortisol and cortisone. In T-SS pigs, the level of FGMs was higher after transportation than in NT-SS pigs. The level of FGMs of T-D pigs initially increased but then reached similar levels to those of NT-SS sooner than T-SS. In contrast, hair cortisol and cortisone did not respond to the treatments. Nevertheless, the hair cortisone/cortisol ratio increased due to transport and decreased after dexamethasone administration. Daily faecal sampling proved still more reliable than 60-day hair sampling for assessing adrenocortical activity. Transported pigs recovered their adrenocortical baseline levels within 24 h. Dexamethasone attenuated the response to transport.
ABSTRACT
There is a growing ethical concern in modern society about animals' quality of life. We hypothesize that zoo visitors' perception of zoo animal welfare, particularly in the case of lesser anteaters, changes positively after listening to scientific information. Visitors observing active lesser anteaters in their enclosures at Córdoba Zoo (Argentina) were asked to respond to a questionnaire about animal welfare. The treatment group (T) answered the questionnaire after listening to a brief informative talk based on local scientific studies on lesser anteaters. The control group (C) answered the questionnaire without hearing the informative talk. Visitors (87.2%) considered biological, sanitary, and sociocultural aspects to be necessary conditions for optimum wild zoo-housed animal welfare. The majority of visitors considered that natural surroundings provide the highest level of welfare for wild animals. Visitors in the T group ranked the zoo as providing a higher level of animal welfare than those in group C. In reference to management measurements, the T group agreed on the positive effect of the application of environmental enrichment (Likert Medians: C = 4 and T = 5; p = .0443). On the basis of their perception, most visitors in both groups stated that the lesser anteaters at Córdoba Zoo appeared to be in a good state of welfare. We interpret this as meaning that, what these Córdoba zoo visitors personally perceived while observing the lesser anteaters carried greater weight than what they learned from the informative talk, though the talk did slightly affect their opinion.
Subject(s)
Animal Welfare , Animals, Zoo , Eutheria/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Animal Husbandry/standards , Animals , Argentina , Behavior, Animal , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Surveys and QuestionnairesABSTRACT
We characterized behavioral and adrenocortical activities of Tamandua tetradactyla under human care driven by the hypothesis that they vary between males and females. We also assessed the potential association between natural or abnormal behaviors and adrenocortical activity. We kept females and males T. tetradactyla in individual, contiguous enclosures at Córdoba Zoo (Argentina), under natural photoperiod and temperature. During 29 consecutive days we monitored the animals' behavior by recording their activity pattern every 5 min using infrared cameras (8352 records/individual). We collected all feces and measured fecal glucocorticoid metabolites (FGM) with an 11-oxoaetiocholanolone enzyme immunoassay. We found individual differences in all behavioral variables. We detected that females exhibited lower total activity than males (23.8 ± 0.2% and 32.3 ± 0.3%, respectively; p = .005). Females were more active at night and males during the day (p < .05) and exhibited less abnormal behaviors than males (p = .05). Although we did not find sex-related differences for average FGM, we detected individual differences (p < .0001). We found that daily FGM showed negative (-0.39) and positive (0.38) correlations with natural and abnormal behaviors, respectively (p < .0001). Thus, we consider that individual input and sex are factors to be considered in stress responses of the species in captivity. Natural and abnormal behaviors may demand different levels of adrenocortical activity. Our findings may prove useful as normative data for ex situ management of conservation programs.
Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Feces/chemistry , Glucocorticoids/metabolism , Xenarthra , Animals , Animals, Zoo/metabolism , Female , Glucocorticoids/chemistry , Housing, Animal , Male , Sex Characteristics , Stress, PhysiologicalABSTRACT
Many environmental conditions elevate plasma corticosterone in laying birds, leading to elevated hormone accumulation in the egg. We investigated whether maternal yolk corticosterone levels in Greater Rheas differ between fresh eggs collected from an intensive (IRS) and a semi-extensive (SRS) rearing system. After HPLC validation, yolk corticosterone was measured using a corticosterone (125) I radio-immunoassay kit. Results (mean ± SE) showed that eggs collected from the IRS exhibited a significantly higher corticosterone concentration than eggs from SRS (89.88 ± 8.93 vs. 45.41 ± 5.48 ng/g yolk, respectively). Our findings suggest that rearing conditions under an intensive scheme (e.g., small pens with bare ground, no direct foraging and handling) might be perceived as more stressful for Greater Rhea females than semi-extensive rearing conditions (e.g., low animal density distributed in extensive areas and direct foraging), which would result in the transfer of higher yolk corticosterone levels. A better understanding of environmental conditions and female traits that affect yolk corticosterone deposition provides a background for future studies concerning the roles of maternal corticosterone on offspring development. Zoo Biol. 35:246-250, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Subject(s)
Animals, Zoo/physiology , Corticosterone/metabolism , Egg Yolk/chemistry , Environment , Rheiformes/physiology , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Animal Husbandry/standards , Animals , Corticosterone/analysis , Female , Rheiformes/metabolismABSTRACT
One of the current standard approaches to the study of animal welfare is measuring hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity, frequently in association with behavioral assessment. We studied the effects of food-based environmental enrichment on adrenocortical activity and behavior in zoo-housed collared anteaters (Tamandua tetradactyla; n = 5). We successfully validated measurements of fecal cortisol metabolites (FCMs) using an 11-oxoetiocholanolone enzyme immunoassay by stimulating (ACTH injection) and suppressing (dexamethasone administration) adrenocortical activity. Three months later, we subjected animals to an ABA-type experiment (three 6-week periods): pre-enrichment (routine diet: A), enrichment (modified diet: B), and post-enrichment (routine diet: A) periods. We assessed adrenocortical activity by collecting individual feces three times a week (total number of samples: 228), and evaluated behavior by performing 3 days of behavioral observations per period (with a total of 3,600 behavioral data points for the individuals studied). Statistical analysis revealed changes in FCM concentrations (µg/g) over the periods (3.04 ± 0.68, 2.98 ± 0.66, and 4.04 ± 0.90, respectively). Additionally, it showed that the number of FCM peaks was highly reduced during enrichment; meanwhile active natural behaviors were significantly increased. We consider that these changes in response to food-based environmental enrichment improved the welfare of individual zoo-housed collared anteaters. This research might contribute to in situ and ex situ studies on the physiology and behavior of this endemic South American species.
Subject(s)
Animal Feed , Animal Husbandry , Animal Welfare , Behavior, Animal , Xenarthra/physiology , Animals , Animals, Zoo , Female , MaleABSTRACT
La enfermedad grave de las carótidas primitivas y externas es una entidad poco frecuente, que en general ocurre en pacientes con aterosclerosis avanzada. En esta presentación se describe el caso de una mujer de 83 años, derivada por presentar episodios de mareos, cefaleas y pérdida del equilibrio, amaurosis definitiva del ojo derecho, disminución de la agudeza visual del ojo izquierdo e hipoacusia bilateral a altas frecuencias. El eco-Doppler color de los vasos del cuello mostró enfermedad significativa de las carótidas primitivas y externas bilaterales y del bulbo carotídeo derecho, con un circuito de revascularización inverso a través de las arterias carótidas externas bilaterales, las cuales, a su vez, presentaban estenosis significativas en sus respectivos orígenes.
External common carotid artery disease is a severe and rare entity, which generally occurs in patients with advanced atherosclerosis. This report describes the case of a 83-year-old woman, who was referred due to dizziness, headaches and loss of balance, permanent amaurosis of the right eye, decreased acuity of the left eye and bilateral hypoacusis at high frequencies. A color Doppler ultrasound of the neck vessels revealed significant bilateral disease of the external common carotid arteries and right carotid bulb, with an inverse revascularization circuit through bilateral external carotid arteries, which also showed significant stenosis in their respective origins.
ABSTRACT
La enfermedad grave de las carótidas primitivas y externas es una entidad poco frecuente, que en general ocurre en pacientes con aterosclerosis avanzada. En esta presentación se describe el caso de una mujer de 83 años, derivada por presentar episodios de mareos, cefaleas y pérdida del equilibrio, amaurosis definitiva del ojo derecho, disminución de la agudeza visual del ojo izquierdo e hipoacusia bilateral a altas frecuencias. El eco-Doppler color de los vasos del cuello mostró enfermedad significativa de las carótidas primitivas y externas bilaterales y del bulbo carotídeo derecho, con un circuito de revascularización inverso a través de las arterias carótidas externas bilaterales, las cuales, a su vez, presentaban estenosis significativas en sus respectivos orígenes.(AU)
External common carotid artery disease is a severe and rare entity, which generally occurs in patients with advanced atherosclerosis. This report describes the case of a 83-year-old woman, who was referred due to dizziness, headaches and loss of balance, permanent amaurosis of the right eye, decreased acuity of the left eye and bilateral hypoacusis at high frequencies. A color Doppler ultrasound of the neck vessels revealed significant bilateral disease of the external common carotid arteries and right carotid bulb, with an inverse revascularization circuit through bilateral external carotid arteries, which also showed significant stenosis in their respective origins.(AU)
ABSTRACT
Up to the present no studies have been conducted either on baseline concentrations of adrenal hormones or on hormonal responses to stress in Greater rhea (Rhea americana) and most ratite species. The aims of this work were to assess the presence of corticosterone in plasma of Greater rhea, to validate a corticosterone (125)I-radioimmunoassay for determining corticosterone levels in plasma samples and to study the activation of the adrenal gland after an adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) challenge. Six captive Greater rhea juveniles of 10 months of age received an intravenous ACTH injection. Blood samples were taken at 0min (baseline pre-ACTH levels), and post-injection at 15, 30, 60min and at 24 and 48h. The high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis of pooled plasma showed that corticosterone is the glucocorticoid found in the plasma of Greater rhea. Biochemical assays of standard validation (e.g., parallelism, exogenous corticosterone recovery) showed that measurements of corticosterone present in the plasma of the Greater rhea provided by commercial corticosterone (125)I-radioimmunoassay were accurate and precise. ACTH challenge induced a more than 40-fold increase in plasma corticosterone at 60min post-ACTH (from 4.0 to 166.5ng/ml, on average). The corticosterone response to ACTH in Greater rhea was higher than is usual in birds, an apparently typical characteristic of ratites.
Subject(s)
Adrenocorticotropic Hormone/pharmacology , Corticosterone/blood , Rheiformes/blood , Stress, Physiological/drug effects , Animals , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Female , Male , RadioimmunoassayABSTRACT
The Chinchilla is a rodent that was once abundant in the central Andes of South America. Excessive hunting for fur greatly reduced its distribution at the beginning of the twentieth century, and today Chinchilla species are nearly extinct in the wild. Although protected, wild populations of chinchilla are still declining. In general, this species has received little research attention and its biology is poorly understood. Improvements in captive breeding, husbandry, and genetic management are needed to ensure the conservation of the species. In this study, a noninvasive corticosteroid hormone monitoring technique was validated for use in Chinchilla lanigera. Two male domestic chinchillas were administered 3H-corticosterone (i.m.) to determine the time course and relative proportion of urinary and fecal steroid metabolites. Most radioactivity was detected in urine and feces 5-10 and approximately 30 h post-isotope administration, respectively. Corticosteroid immunoreactivity was assessed by corticosterone radioimmunoassay (RIA) and cortisol enzyme immunoassay (EIA). High-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) separation of corticosteroid metabolites in unprocessed urine revealed the presence of highly polar corticosteroid metabolites, but after enzymatic hydrolysis and diethyl ether extraction, most immunoreactivity co-eluted with unconjugated cortisol. A 'cause-and-effect' relationship between the administration of exogenous adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH), and the appearance of increased urinary corticosteroid metabolites demonstrated the physiological relevance of these measures for evaluating adrenal status in male chinchillas. From a conservation perspective, these methods can aid in situ and ex situ initiatives designed to evaluate how environmental conditions and management strategies affect overall animal health, well-being and reproduction.