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Physiological stress links parasites to carotenoid‐based colour signals
Authors:F. MOUGEOT  J. MARTÍNEZ‐PADILLA  G. R. BORTOLOTTI  L. M. I. WEBSTER  S. B. PIERTNEY
Affiliation:1. EEZA (CSIC), Almeria, Spain;2. IREC (CSIC‐UCLM‐JCCM), Ciudad Real, Spain;3. Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK;4. Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
Abstract:Vertebrates commonly use carotenoid‐based traits as social signals. These can reliably advertise current nutritional status and health because carotenoids must be acquired through the diet and their allocation to ornaments is traded‐off against other self‐maintenance needs. We propose that the coloration more generally reveals an individual’s ability to cope with stressful conditions. We tested this idea by manipulating the nematode parasite infection in free‐living red grouse (Lagopus lagopus scoticus) and examining the effects on body mass, carotenoid‐based coloration of a main social signal and the amount of corticosterone deposited in feathers grown during the experiment. We show that parasites increase stress and reduce carotenoid‐based coloration, and that the impact of parasites on coloration was associated with changes in corticosterone, more than changes in body mass. Carotenoid‐based coloration appears linked to physiological stress and could therefore reveal an individual’s ability to cope with stressors.
Keywords:feather corticosterone  nematode parasite  red grouse Lagopus lagopus scoticus  sexual selection  signal evolution  trade‐off  Trichostrongylus tenuis
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