Diet, antioxidants and oxidative status in pygoscelid penguins

Author:

Colominas-Ciuró R1,Bertellotti M23,D’Amico VL2,Carabajal E4,Benzal J5,Vidal V1,Motas M6,Santos M7,Coria N7,Barbosa A1

Affiliation:

1. Dpto. Ecología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (MNCN-CSIC), 28006 Madrid, Spain

2. Centro para el Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (CESIMAR-CONICET), U9120ACD Puerto Madryn, Argentina

3. Cát. Biología de la Conservación, Universidad del Chubut, U9120OOW Puerto Madryn, Argentina

4. Instituto de Biología de Organismos Marinos (IBIOMAR-CONICET), U9120ACD Puerto Madryn, Argentina

5. Dpto. Ecología Funcional y Evolutiva, Estación Experimental de Zonas Áridas (EEZA-CSIC), 04120 Almería, Spain

6. Área de Toxicología, Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Murcia, 30100 Murcia, Spain

7. Dpto. Biología Predadores Tope, Instituto Antártico Argentino, B1650CSP San Martín, Argentina

Abstract

Ecologically similar marine species inhabiting the same areas compete for food resources. Such competition is reduced by resource-partitioning strategies that may affect physiology. For instance, diet and feeding strategies may affect the antioxidant defences or the production of reactive oxygen species. Oxidative stress is defined as the imbalance between pro-oxidants and antioxidant defences. If such an imbalance favours the former, this can lead to oxidative damage, and oxidative stress increases. However, to our knowledge, how free-ranging animals adjust their oxidative status in relation to their foraging habitats, diet and dietary antioxidants has not yet been studied. Penguins are an interesting biological model for such a comparison because their diet, based on krill, fish and/or cephalopods, presents strong variation in dietary antioxidant content. We therefore examined trophic level (δ15N), foraging habitat (δ13C), dietary antioxidants (retinol, α-tocopherol and astaxanthin) and oxidative status (plasma non-enzymatic antioxidant capacity and oxidative damage) in pygoscelid penguins (chinstrap Pygoscelis antarcticus, gentoo P. papua and Adélie P. adeliae) breeding in Antarctica. We found interspecific differences in all variables analysed except α-tocopherol. Gentoo penguins exploited more cephalopods and fish in coastal and benthic habitats, Adélies showed an intermediate position, whereas chinstraps foraged more on krill and fish in pelagic waters. Dietary antioxidant levels showed specific patterns resulting in relationships with prey items. However, we did not find any clear relationships between dietary antioxidants and species-specific antioxidant capacity, suggesting the importance of endogenously produced antioxidants. Oxidative status appeared to be differently related to foraging strategy and antioxidant capacity in each species.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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