Does Migration Constrain Glucocorticoid Phenotypes? Testing Corticosterone Levels during Breeding in Migratory Versus Resident Birds

Author:

Uehling Jennifer J123ORCID,Regnier Emma34,Vitousek Maren N23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, West Chester University , West Chester, PA, 19383 , USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University , Ithaca, NY, 14853 , USA

3. Cornell Lab of Ornithology , Ithaca, NY, 14850 , USA

4. Science Illustration Certificate Program, California State University Monterey Bay , Monterey, CA, 93955 , USA

Abstract

Synopsis Corticosterone, the main glucocorticoid in birds, is a major mediator of the incredible physiological feat of migration. Corticosterone plays important roles in migration, from preparation to in-flight energy mobilization to refueling, and corticosterone levels often show distinct elevations or depressions during certain stages of the migratory process. Here, we ask whether corticosterone's role in migration shapes its modulation during other life-history stages, as is the case with some other phenotypically flexible traits involved in migration. Specifically, we use a global dataset of corticosterone measures to test whether birds’ migratory status (migrant versus resident) predicts corticosterone levels during breeding. Our results indicate that migratory status predicts neither baseline nor stress-induced corticosterone levels in breeding birds; despite corticosterone’s role in migration, we find no evidence that migratory corticosterone phenotypes carry over to breeding. We encourage future studies to continue to explore corticosterone in migrants versus residents across the annual cycle. Additionally, future efforts should aim to disentangle the possible effects of environmental conditions and migratory status on corticosterone phenotypes; potentially fruitful avenues include focusing on regions where migrants and residents overlap during breeding. Overall, insights from work in this area could demonstrate whether migration shapes traits during other important life stages, identify tradeoffs or limitations associated with the migratory lifestyle, and ultimately shed light on the evolution of flexible traits and migration.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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