Steroid Hormone Variation and Stress Responses in Short-finned Pilot Whales

Dissertation As humans continue to introduce stressors into the marine environment, we are obligated to understand how our behaviors impact wildlife. For many cetacean populations, anthropogenic noise poses a significant conservation threat, but the ability to monitor these animals is constrained by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wisse, Jillian
Other Authors: Nowacek, Douglas P
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27575
Description
Summary:Dissertation As humans continue to introduce stressors into the marine environment, we are obligated to understand how our behaviors impact wildlife. For many cetacean populations, anthropogenic noise poses a significant conservation threat, but the ability to monitor these animals is constrained by their often-remote habitats and limited time at the surface. Researchers have developed innovative solutions to overcome these challenges, including the development of techniques that enable physiological sampling with minimal disturbance. As frontiers, these methods require careful development and validation before they can be used reliably in experimental studies. In this dissertation, I employ one of these innovative techniques, measuring steroid hormones in remote blubber biopsy samples, in short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus). As modulators of reproduction and stress, steroid hormones provide information that is advantageous for wildlife monitoring. Because a validated method for measuring these compounds in short-finned pilot whale blubber did not yet exist, I adapted a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method to simultaneously quantify 11 steroid hormones of interest. Before proceeding with its application, I tested its analytical and biological validity with blubber from three stranded short-finned pilot whales. Next, I applied the validated LC-MS/MS method to an archive of blubber biopsies, collected from free-ranging short-finned pilot whales in the Western North Atlantic. Leveraging the comprehensive nature of LC-MS/MS profiling, I investigated relationships between hormones and characterized steroid hormone profiles across demographic groups and seasons. In the fourth chapter, I conducted an acoustic response study, using the previously established methods to collect and quantify steroid hormones after exposure to simulated mid-frequency active sonar (MFAS). I modeled the responses of cortisol and cortisone over time to gain insight into steroid perfusion rates ...