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Elevation impacts the balance between growth and oxidative stress in coal tits
Authors:Antoine Stier  Anne Delestrade  Sandrine Zahn  Mathilde Arrivé  François Criscuolo  Sylvie Massemin-Challet
Affiliation:1. Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France
2. Département d’Ecologie, Physiologie et Ethologie (DEPE), CNRS UMR7178, 23 rue Becquerel, 67087, Strasbourg Cedex 2, France
3. Centre de Recherche sur les Ecosystèmes d’Altitude (CREA), Observatoire du Mont-Blanc, 67 lacets du Belvédère, 74400, Chamonix, France
4. Laboratoire d’Ecologie Alpine, Université de Savoie (UMR 5553), 73376, Le Bourget du Lac, France
Abstract:The short favorable period of time available for the growth in seasonal environments could constrain the resources allocation between growth and other life-history traits, and the short-term fitness benefits of increased growth rate may prevail over other functions. Accelerated growth rates have been associated with long-term deleterious consequences (e.g., decreased lifespan), and recently oxidative stress (the imbalance between pro-oxidants generation and antioxidant defenses) has been suggested as a mediator of these effects. Here, we examined the impact of elevation on growth rate and self-maintenance parameters (resting metabolism, oxidative damage, and antioxidant defenses) of coal tit chicks (Periparus ater). We predicted that the shorter favorable season at the higher-elevation site could lead to a reallocation of resources towards growth at the expense of self-maintenance processes. We found that chicks at high elevation grew significantly faster in terms of body mass and body size. Chicks from the high-elevation site presented higher resting metabolism, higher oxidative damage level, but similar antioxidant defenses, compared to low-elevation chicks. Interestingly, the chicks exhibiting the better antioxidant defenses at 7 days were also those with the highest resting metabolic rate, and the chicks that grew at the faster rate within the high-elevation site were those with the highest levels of oxidative damage on DNA. Our study supports the idea that increasing elevation leads to a higher growth rate in coal tit chicks, possibly in response to a shorter favorable season. In accordance with life-history theory, a bigger investment in growth was done at the expense of body maintenance, at least in terms of oxidative stress.
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