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Blubber cortisol qualitatively reflects circulating cortisol concentrations in bottlenose dolphins
Authors:Cory D Champagne  Nicholas M Kellar  Daniel E Crocker  Samuel K Wasser  Rebecca K Booth  Marisa L Trego  Dorian S Houser
Institution:1. National Marine Mammal Foundation, San Diego, California, U.S.A;2. Marine Mammal and Turtle Division, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, La Jolla, California, U.S.A;3. Department of Biology, Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, California, U.S.A;4. Center for Conservation Biology, Box 5. 351800, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A;6. Ocean Associates, Inc., Arlington, Virginia, U.S.A
Abstract:Stress hormones, released into circulation as a consequence of disturbance, are classically assayed from blood samples but may also be detected in a variety of matrices. Blubber and fecal samples can be remotely collected from free‐ranging cetaceans without the confounding hormone elevations associated with chase, capture, and handling required to collect blood samples. The relationship between cortisol concentrations in circulation with that of blubber and feces, however, is unknown. To assess these associations, we elevated cortisol by orally administering hydrocortisone for five days in five bottlenose dolphins. Voluntary blood and fecal samples were collected daily; blubber biopsies were collected on day one, just prior to hydrocortisone administration, and days three and five of hydrocortisone administration. We evaluated subsequent changes in several circulating stress hormones as well as cortisol and glucocorticoid metabolites in blubber and feces, respectively. There was a significant association between cortisol levels in serum and in blubber (F1,12.7 = 14.3, P < 0.01, mR2 = 0.57) despite substantial variability in blubber cortisol levels. Counterintuitively, fecal cortisol metabolite levels were inversely related to serum cortisol. The relationship between serum and blubber cortisol levels suggests blubber samples from remote sampling may be useful to detect stress loads in this species.
Keywords:stress  marine mammal  bottlenose dolphin  Tursiops truncatus  HPA axis  conservation
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