Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2800644 | General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Glucocorticoids are main candidates for mediating life-history trade-offs by regulating the balance between current reproduction and survival. It has been proposed that slow-living organisms should show higher stress-induced glucocorticoid levels that favor self-maintenance rather than current reproduction when compared to fast-living organisms. We tested this hypothesis in replicate populations of two ecotypes of the garter snake (Thamnophis elegans) that exhibit slow and fast pace of life strategies. We subjected free-ranging snakes to a capture-restraint protocol and compared the stress-induced corticosterone levels between slow- and fast-living snakes. We also used a five-year dataset to assess whether baseline corticosterone levels followed the same pattern as stress-induced levels in relation to pace of life. In accordance with the hypothesis, slow-living snakes showed higher stress-induced corticosterone levels than fast-living snakes. Baseline corticosterone levels showed a similar pattern with ecotype, although differences depended on the year of study. Overall, however, levels of glucocorticoids are higher in slow-living than fast-living snakes, which should favor self-maintenance and survival at the expense of current reproduction. The results of the present study are the first to relate glucocorticoid levels and pace of life in a reptilian system and contribute to our understanding of the physiological mechanisms involved in life-history evolution.
► First study to relate glucocorticoid levels and pace of life in a reptilian system. ► Slow-living snakes higher stress-induced corticosterone than fast-living snakes. ► Similar pattern found for baseline corticosterone levels. ► High corticosterone should favor self-maintenance/survival in slow-living snakes. ► Results suggest possible physiological mechanism involved in life-history evolution.