Flexibility in an emergency life-history stage: acute food deprivation prevents sickness behaviour but not the immune response

Author:

Wilsterman Kathryn1ORCID,Alonge Mattina M.1,Ernst Darcy K.2,Limber Cody1,Treidel Lisa A.1ORCID,Bentley George E.13

Affiliation:

1. Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA

2. Department of Biology, Las Positas College, Livermore, CA, USA

3. Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA

Abstract

The emergency life-history stage (ELHS) can be divided into two subcategories that describe distinct, coordinated responses to disease- or non-disease-related physiological challenges. Whether an individual can simultaneously express aspects of both subcategories when faced with multiple challenges is poorly understood. Emergency life-history theory suggests that disease- and non-disease-related responses are coordinated at the level of the whole organism and therefore cannot be expressed simultaneously. However, the reactive scope and physiological regulatory network models suggest that traits can be independently regulated, allowing for components of both disease- and non-disease-related responses to be simultaneously expressed within a single organism. To test these ideas experimentally, we subjected female zebra finches to food deprivation, an immune challenge, both, or neither, and measured a suite of behavioural and physiological traits involved in the ELHS. We examined whether the trait values expressed by birds experiencing simultaneous challenges resembled trait values of birds experiencing a single challenge or if birds could express a mixture of trait values concurrently. We find that birds can respond to simultaneous challenges by regulating components of the behavioural and immune responses independently of one another. Modularity within these physio-behavioural networks adds additional dimensions to how we evaluate the intensity or quality of an ELHS. Whether modularity provides fitness advantages or costs in nature remains to be determined.

Funder

Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology

National Science Founation

Sigma Xi

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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