Assessing variation in faecal glucocorticoid concentrations in gray whales exposed to anthropogenic stressors

Enrico Pirotta*, Alejandro Fernandez Ajó, KC Bierlich, Clara Bird, C. Loren Buck, Samara Haver, Joseph Haxel, Lisa Hildebrand, Kathleen Hunt, Leila Lemos, Leslie New, Leigh Torres

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)
14 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Understanding how individual animals respond to stressors behaviourally and physiologically is a critical step towards quantifying long-term population consequences and informing management efforts. Glucocorticoid (GC) metabolite accumulation in various matrices provides an integrated measure of adrenal activation in baleen whales and could thus be used to investigate physiological changes following exposure to stressors. In this study, we measured GC concentrations in faecal samples of Pacific Coast Feeding Group (PCFG) gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) collected over seven consecutive years to assess the association between GC content and metrics of exposure to sound levels and vessel traffic at different temporal scales, while controlling for contextual variables such as sex, reproductive status, age, body condition, year, time of year and location. We develop a Bayesian Generalized Additive Modelling approach that accommodates the many complexities of these data, including non-linear variation in hormone concentrations, missing covariate values, repeated samples, sampling variability and some hormone concentrations below the limit of detection. Estimated relationships showed large variability, but emerging patterns indicate a strong context-dependency of physiological variation, depending on sex, body condition and proximity to a port. Our results highlight the need to control for baseline hormone variation related to context, which otherwise can obscure the functional relationship between faecal GCs and stressor exposure. Therefore, extensive data collection to determine sources of baseline variation in well-studied populations, such as PCFG gray whales, could shed light on cetacean stress physiology and be used to extend applicability to less-well-studied taxa. GC analyses may offer greatest utility when employed as part of a suite of markers that, in aggregate, provide a multivariate measure of physiological status, better informing estimates of individuals’ health and ultimately the consequences of anthropogenic stressors on populations.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbercoad082
Number of pages20
JournalConservation Physiology
Volume11
Issue number1
Early online date11 Nov 2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 11 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • Anthropogenic stressors
  • Baleen whales
  • Dose-response functions
  • Faecal hormone metabolites
  • Glucocorticoids
  • Pacific Coast Feeding Group gray whales
  • Physiological variation

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