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11.
Nocturnal species may communicate by visual signals more frequentlythan previously thought. In fact, such species are habituallyactive around sunset and sunrise, when light conditions arestill suitable for visual communication. We investigated thecommunication function of a visual cue in the eagle owl Bubobubo, a nocturnal predator. In this species, territorial andcourtship displays peak during the sunset and sunrise periodsand involve the display of a white badge located on the throatwhose reflectance properties are sex and period dependent. Experimentalintrusions were conducted at 30 eagle owl territories in orderto understand the function of the white badge during contests.We analyzed the reactions of both male and female owners towarda taxidermic mount with a normal brightness and a brightness-reducedwhite badge, with both male and female territorial calls. Ourresults indicate that the white badge of eagle owls plays animportant role in visual communication during contests. Malesdisplayed more frequently toward male low-brightness mounts,which were also approached more closely or attacked. Femalebehavior did not differ between experimental groups. Furthermore,a positive relationship between male badge brightness and breedingoutput suggested a potential role of the white badge as an honestsignal of male quality. The need to convey information by visualcommunication in a nocturnal species may have promoted the evolutionof visual signals employed at crepuscule.  相似文献   
12.
The allocation of resources to reproduction and survival is a central question of studies of life history evolution. Usually, increased allocation to current reproduction is paid in terms of reduced future reproduction and/or decreased survival. However, the proximal mechanisms underlying the cost of reproduction are poorly understood. Recently, it has been shown that increased susceptibility to oxidative stress might be one of such proximate links between reproduction and self-maintenance. Organisms possess a range of antioxidant defenses, including endogenously produced molecules (e.g., enzymes) and compounds ingested with food (e.g., carotenoids). If reproductive effort increases the production of reactive oxygen species, the availability of antioxidant defenses may partly or fully counteract the free-radical damages. One could, therefore, expect that the trade-off between reproduction and oxidative stress is modulated by the availability of antioxidant defenses. We tested this hypothesis in zebra finches. We manipulated reproductive effort by either allowing or preventing pairs to breed. Within each breeding or non-breeding group, the availability of antioxidant compounds was manipulated by supplementing or not supplementing the drinking water with carotenoids. We found that although birds in the breeding and non-breeding groups did not differ in their resistance to oxidative stress (the breakdown of red blood cells submitted to a controlled free-radical attack), one aspect of breeding effort (i.e., the number of eggs laid by birds in both breeding and non-breeding groups) was negatively correlated with resistance to oxidative stress only in birds that did not benefit from a carotenoid-supplemented diet. This result therefore suggests that carotenoid availability can modulate the trade-off between reproduction and resistance to oxidative stress.  相似文献   
13.
The oxidation handicap hypothesis proposes that testosterone mediates the trade-off between the expression of secondary sexual traits and the fight against free radicals. Coloured traits controlled by testosterone can be produced by carotenoid pigments (yellow-orange-red traits), but carotenoids also help to quench free radicals. Recently, it has been shown that testosterone increases the amount of circulating carotenoids in birds. Here, a testosterone-mediated trade-off in the carotenoid allocation between colour expression and the fight against oxidative stress is proposed. Male red-legged partridges were treated with testosterone, anti-androgens or manipulated as controls. Testosterone-treated males maintained the highest circulating carotenoid levels, but showed the palest red traits and no evidence of oxidative damage. Increased levels of a key intracellular antioxidant (i.e. glutathione) indicated that an oxidative challenge was in fact induced but controlled. The trade-off was apparently solved by reducing redness, allowing increased carotenoid availability, which could have contributed to buffer oxidative stress.  相似文献   
14.
To understand how traits used in animal communication evolved and are maintained as honest signals, we need to understand the mechanisms that prevent cheating. It has been proposed that honest signaling is guaranteed by the costs associated with the signal expression. However, the nature of these costs is still under debate. Melanin-based signals are intriguing because their expression seems to be tightly controlled by genes and the resource involved (i.e. melanin) seems to be not limited. However, in vertebrates, low levels of a key intracellular antioxidant (i.e. glutathione) are needed to promote melanogenesis. We propose that melanin-based ornaments can signal the ability to cope with oxidative stress because those individuals with low enough levels of glutathione, such as those required for melanin production, should manage well the whole of the antioxidant machinery in order to maintain a certain oxidative status. We analysed the expression of a melanin-based signal: the well-known black stripe of the great tit (Parus major). Great tit nestlings were injected with a specific inhibitor of glutathione production (DL-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine; BSO) throughout their development. BSO effectively decreased intracellular glutathione levels without apparent side effects on growth or body condition. Instead, treated nestlings developed black breast stripes 70-100% larger than controls. Moreover, treated nestlings also compensated the decrease in glutathione levels by increasing the levels of circulating antioxidants. Results indicate that melanin-based signals can be at least partially permeable to environmental influences such as those associated to oxidative stress. They also reveal a potential handicap associated to the expression of this kind of signals. Finally, although other contributing factors could have been present, our findings emphasize the role of oxidative stress in shaping the evolution of animal signals in general and, in particular, those produced by pigments.  相似文献   
15.
A recent study shows that the expression of pheomelanin-based coloration in barn owls follows a continuous gradient across Europe as a result of local adaptation. The selective pressures that promote local adaptation remain, however, unknown. Here we hypothesize and test that natural radioactivity levels follow a similar spatial gradient to that of pheomelanin-based color in Europe and thus represents a potential selective pressure. The rationale is that the production of pheomelanin consumes glutathione (GSH), a key intracellular antioxidant, and that GSH is particularly susceptible to ionizing radiation, which depletes antioxidants. As predicted, the intensity of pheomelanin-based coloration in 18 populations of barn owls was negatively associated with terrestrial γ-dose rates across Europe. Therefore, we propose that natural selection acts against barn owls that present the molecular basis to produce large amounts of pheomelanin in those populations that are exposed to high levels of natural radioactivity, as in these populations individuals would require higher antioxidant resources to combat oxidative stress. This is the first time that natural radioactivity levels are related to the expression of a phenotypic trait.  相似文献   
16.
Yellow-orange-red ornaments present in the integuments (feathers, bare parts) of birds are often produced by carotenoid pigments and may serve to signal the quality of the bearer. Although carotenoid esterification in tissues is a common phenomenon, most of the work on avian carotenoids has been focused on the identification of free forms or have been done after sample saponification. Here we determined free and esterified carotenoid composition in a bird species with red ornaments: the red-legged partridge (Alectoris rufa). Carotenoids from leg integument were extracted and processed by TLC to separate three major carotenoid groups (free form, mono- and diesters with fatty acids), whereas saponified extracts gave only free forms of carotenoids. TLC fractions were then analyzed by HPLC-DAD with C18 phase column for a preliminary identification of carotenoid groups. The final characterization of free carotenoids and its esters with fatty acids was performed with direct extracts analyzed by LC-MS and LC-MS/MS with a C30 phase, always with a system coupled to DAD. The main carotenoid (λ(max) 478 nm and [M+H](+) at m/z 597.2) was identified as astaxanthin by comparison with standards. A second carotenoid (λ(max) between 440 and 480 nm and [M+H](+) at m/z 581.3) was not identified among any of the commercially available carotenoid standards, although it could correspond to pectenolone according to its fragmentation pattern. Both the unidentified carotenoid and astaxanthin formed monoesters with fatty acids, but only astaxanthin was in its diesterified form. Monoesters were mainly formed with palmitic, stearic, oleic and linoleic acids. Complementary analyses of fatty acid composition in partridge integument by GC-MS revealed high amounts of these and other fatty acids, such as myristic, arachidic and docosanoic acids. The combination of HPLC-DAD and LC-MS/MS spectra was especially useful to identify the carotenoids present in the esterified forms and the probable masses of the fatty acids included in them, respectively.  相似文献   
17.
Oxidative stress is increasingly recognized as a key selective force shaping evolutionary trade-offs. One such trade-off involves investing in immunity versus combating oxidative stress. While there is broad evidence that mounting an immune response causes increased oxidative stress, the effect that increased oxidative stress during development has at a later stage on immune responsiveness remains little known. The production of melanin-based coloration in vertebrates is influenced by oxidative stress and by hormones, such as the alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH). Oxidative stress could impair immunity, and this might be a cost associated with the production of melanin traits. α-MSH has immunomodulatory effects, with most evidence pointing towards an improvement of immunity (improved pro-inflammatory activity). Here, we investigated the effects of an oxidative challenge (exposure to a pro-oxidant compound, diquat) and of experimentally elevated α-MSH on the cell-mediated immune responses (CMIR) of growing young (1 month old) red-legged partridges Alectoris rufa in captivity. CMIR were assessed in response to primary and secondary challenges with phytohemagglutinin (PHA). We specifically tested whether an oxidative challenge during growth and development had a delayed effect (4 months after exposure) on immunity. We found that the diquat treatment did not affect primary CMIR, but significantly reduced secondary CMIR. Elevated α-MSH increased primary CMIR in males, but not in females. Our experimental results are consistent with a trade-off between investing in activities that generate oxidative stress (e.g., growth, reproduction, production of ornaments) versus investing in immunity, and shed new lights onto the inter-relationships between immunity, oxidative stress and the expression of melanin-based coloration in vertebrates, revealing a novel, delayed physiological cost that can contribute to ensuring honest signaling.  相似文献   
18.
The chinstrap penguin (Pygoscelis antarctica) is the smallest penguin species to be used to study the physiology of fasting. We analysed body-mass change and plasma chemistry of five non-breeding chinstraps during an experimental fasting period in the breeding season. We also analysed the same parameters in six fasting birds under natural conditions (during an incubation shift, which lasts about 10 days). Both groups presented similar patterns of change, showing a rapid increase in urea and uric acid plasma concentrations. Urea surpassed 3 mmol/l after 5 fasting days, while uric acid reached 1 mmol/l after 9 days. Plasma glucose levels decreased after 11 days, whereas cholesterol also showed a clear reduction during fasting. These results as a whole suggest that chinstrap penguins reached phase III after a short period in comparison with other Pygoscelis species. Body size and ecological factors could explain these inter-specific differences.  相似文献   
19.
20.
Carotenoid-based ornaments may have evolved as a consequence of their costs of production, which would assure the reliability of the traits as signals of individual quality. Different costs due to carotenoid allocation to the signal have been proposed, considering the scarcity of these pigments at the environment (ecological cost) and their physiological properties that would trade against the maintenance of the organism. Carotenoids of many red ornaments (ketocarotenoids) are often the result of biotransformation of those pigments abundant in the diet (usually lutein and zeaxanthin). Some authors have suggested that such a conversion implies a cost relevant for signaling because it requires high levels of antioxidant vitamins in the tissues where biotransformation takes place. We explore this hypothesis in red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa) by analyzing ketocarotenoids in the ornaments (bare parts) and carotenoids, vitamin A in different forms (free and esterified) and vitamin E in blood, liver and fat. Ketocarotenoids in ornaments (astaxanthin and papilioerythrinone) were not found in internal tissues, suggesting that they were directly transformed in the bare parts. However, ketocarotenoid levels where positively correlated with the levels of their precursors (zeaxanthin and lutein, respectively) in internal tissues. Interestingly, ketocarotenoid levels in bare parts negatively and positively correlated with vitamin A and E in the liver, respectively, the same links only being positive in blood. Moreover, retinyl and zeaxanthin levels in liver were negatively related. We hypothesize that storing substrate carotenoids in the main storage site (the liver) implies a cost in terms of regulating the level of vitamin A.  相似文献   
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