Arid
DOI10.1093/icb/icl054
The importance of physiological ecology in conservation biology
Tracy, C. Richard; Nussear, K. E.; Esque, T. C.; Dean-Bradley, K.; Tracy, C. R.; DeFalco, L. A.; Castle, K. T.; Zimmerman, L. C.; Espinoza, R. E.; Barber, A. M.
通讯作者Tracy, C. Richard
会议名称Annual Meeting of the Society-for-Integrative-and-Comparative-Biology
会议日期JAN 04-08, 2006
会议地点Orlando, FL
英文摘要

Many of the threats to the persistence of populations of sensitive species have physiological or pathological mechanisms, and those mechanisms are best understood through the inherently integrative discipline of physiological ecology. The desert tortoise was listed under the Endangered Species Act largely due to a newly recognized upper respiratory disease thought to cause mortality in individuals and severe declines in populations. Numerous hypotheses about the threats to the persistence of desert tortoise populations involve acquisition of nutrients, and its connection to stress and disease. The nutritional wisdom hypothesis posits that animals should forage not for particular food items, but instead, for particular nutrients such as calcium and phosphorus used in building bones. The optimal foraging hypothesis suggests that, in circumstances of resource abundance, tortoises should forage as dietary specialists as a means of maximizing intake of resources. The optimal digestion hypothesis suggests that tortoises should process ingesta in ways that regulate assimilation rate. Finally, the cost-of-switching hypothesis suggests that herbivores, like the desert tortoise, should avoid switching food types to avoid negatively affecting the microbe community responsible for fermenting plants into energy and nutrients. Combining hypotheses into a resource acquisition theory leads to novel predictions that are generally supported by data presented here. Testing hypotheses, and synthesizing test results into a theory, provides a robust scientific alternative to the popular use of untested hypotheses and unanalyzed data to assert the needs of species. The scientific approach should focus on hypotheses concerning anthropogenic modifications of the environment that impact physiological processes ultimately important to population phenomena. We show how measurements of such impacts as nutrient starvation, can cause physiological stress, and that the endocrine mechanisms involved with stress can result in disease. Finally, our new syntheses evince a new hypothesis. Free molecules of the stress hormone corticosterone can inhibit immunity, and the abundance of "free corticosterone" in the blood (thought to be the active form of the hormone) is regulated when the corticosterone molecules combine with binding globulins. The sex hormone, testosterone, combines with the same binding globulin. High levels of testosterone, naturally occurring in the breeding season, may be further enhanced in populations at high densities, and the resulting excess testosterone may compete with binding globulins, thereby releasing corticosterone and reducing immunity to disease. This sequence could result in physiological and pathological phenomena leading to population cycles with a period that would be essentially impossible to observe in desert tortoise. Such cycles could obscure population fluctuations of anthropogenic origin.


来源出版物INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY
ISSN1540-7063
出版年2006
卷号46
期号6
页码1191-1205
出版者OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
类型Article;Proceedings Paper
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E ; CPCI-S
WOS记录号WOS:000242442300043
WOS关键词GALAPAGOS MARINE IGUANAS ; DESERT TORTOISES ; CORTICOSTERONE LEVELS ; GOPHERUS-AGASSIZII ; BINDING PROTEINS ; STRESS ; ENVIRONMENT ; RESPONSES ; TOURISM ; ENERGY
WOS类目Zoology
WOS研究方向Zoology
资源类型会议论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/295981
作者单位(1)Colorado State Univ, Dept Biol, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA;(2)Univ Nevada, Reno, NV 89557 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Tracy, C. Richard,Nussear, K. E.,Esque, T. C.,et al. The importance of physiological ecology in conservation biology[C]:OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC,2006:1191-1205.
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