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ABSTRACT Recent studies indicate that young seabird chicks exposed to relatively short periods of elevated levels of plasma corticosterone may suffer lifelong cognitive impairment that is detrimental to their survivorship and fitness as adults. We examined the chronic effects of investigator disturbance on the baseline and acute stress‐induced levels of plasma corticosterone of Black‐legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) chicks in Chiniak Bay, Kodiak Island, Alaska, in 2005. Kittiwake chicks were assigned to one of three disturbance treatments: (1) routine handling, (2) exposure to investigator presence, but not handled, and (3) neither handled nor exposed to investigator presence prior to sampling. At 12–15 d posthatching, blood samples were collected to determine baseline and stress‐induced concentrations of corticosterone. We found no significant differences in baseline or stress‐induced levels of corticosterone among the three disturbance treatments. Our results suggest that Black‐legged Kittiwake chicks do not perceive investigator presence as a stressor. However, investigators studying kittiwakes at other locations should proceed with caution because sampling protocols and environmental conditions may differ, potentially causing chicks to perceive disturbances differently as well.  相似文献   
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ABSTRACT.   Plasma corticosterone concentrations in birds often increase about 3 min after exposure to a stressor such as capture and handling. When measuring adrenal responsiveness of nestlings in broods with more than one nestling, standardizing capture protocols to equalize the stressor among nestlings if they simultaneously perceive the presence and activity of a researcher as a stressor is logistically difficult. The objective of our study was to determine if nestling Black-legged Kittiwakes ( Rissa tridactyla ) in broods of two mount a corticosterone response when the first nestling is removed from the nest or, alternatively, if each initiates a corticosterone response only at the time it is handled. We obtained blood samples from one nestling within 3 min of initial disturbance of the nest, and then removed and sampled its sibling 10 min later. For younger nestlings, we found no difference in corticosterone levels between those sampled at 3 min and their sibling sampled at 10 min. In contrast, older nestlings sampled at 10 min after initial nest disturbance had elevated corticosterone levels compared to those sampled within 3 min. In addition, nestlings sampled within 3 min of capture had elevated corticosterone when exposed to protracted periods of investigator disturbance at nearby nests. Our results suggest that it is necessary to treat initial disturbance of the nest as the onset of the stress response for all nestlings in multi-nestling broods when handling older nestlings or nestlings of unknown age. In addition, for species that nest in dense colonies, the presence of an investigator at one nest may be a stressor for nestlings in adjacent nests.  相似文献   
3.
Parent black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) and their dependent chicks respond to food shortages by increasing circulatinglevels of corticosterone. To examine the behavioral significanceof corticosterone release, we experimentally increased levelsof circulating corticosterone in parents and chicks up to thelevels observed during food shortages. We found that corticosterone-implantedchicks begged more frequently than sham-implanted controls.Corticosterone-implanted chicks in broods of two begged morefrequently than singletons. Parent kittiwakes then respondedto the increase in corticosterone levels in their chicks byincreasing chick-feeding rates. However, feeding rates werenot different among corticosterone-implanted chicks in broodsof two and singletons. We also found that corticosterone-implantedparents spent more time away from the nest—perhaps foraging—andless time brooding/guarding chicks than sham-implanted controls.Untreated mates of the corticosterone-implanted bird did notcompensate for the change in their partner's behavior; consequently, chicks were left unattended about 20% of the time compared to1% at the control nests. However, corticosterone-implantedparents did not decrease their chick-feeding rates. Our findingssuggest two functional implications of the increased corticosteronesecretion during food shortages in the black-legged kittiwake:it facilitates begging in chicks, and it affects time allocatedby parents to guarding young at the nest. Thus, release of corticosterone might provide a mechanistic link between physiological condition and behavioral interactions among adults and theiryoung.  相似文献   
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