Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)

Wildlife researchers must balance the need to safely capture and handle their study animals to sample tissues, collect morphological measurements, and attach dataloggers while simultaneously ensuring their results are not confounded by stress artifacts caused by handling. To determine the physiologi...

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Main Author: Cooley, Lauren A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SJSU ScholarWorks 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/5256
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/context/etd_theses/article/8803/viewcontent/Cooley_s.PDF
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spelling ftsanjosestate:oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-8803 2023-07-30T04:03:17+02:00 Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris) Cooley, Lauren A. 2022-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/5256 https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/context/etd_theses/article/8803/viewcontent/Cooley_s.PDF unknown SJSU ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/5256 doi:10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/context/etd_theses/article/8803/viewcontent/Cooley_s.PDF Master's Theses Ecology text 2022 ftsanjosestate https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x 2023-07-17T19:08:41Z Wildlife researchers must balance the need to safely capture and handle their study animals to sample tissues, collect morphological measurements, and attach dataloggers while simultaneously ensuring their results are not confounded by stress artifacts caused by handling. To determine the physiological effects of research activities including chemical immobilization, transport, instrumentation with biologgers, and overnight holding on a model marine mammal species, I collected hormone, blood chemistry, hematology, and heart rate data from 19 juvenile northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) throughout a translocation experiment. Across my six sampling timepoints, cortisol and aldosterone data revealed a moderate hormonal stress response to handling that was accompanied by minor changes in hematocrit, blood glucose, and blood lactate, but not ketone bodies or erythrocyte sedimentation rate. I also performed the first assessment of heart rate as a stress indicator in this species and found that mean heart rate, interbeat interval range, and apnea-eupnea cycles were influenced by handling. However, by the time seals were recaptured after several days at sea, all hormonal and hematological parameters had returned to baseline levels and 95% of study animals were resighted in the wild up to two years post-translocation. Together these findings suggest that while northern elephant seals exhibit mild physiological stress responses to handling activities in the short term, they recover rapidly and show no long-term deleterious effects, making them a robust species for ecological and physiological research. Text Elephant Seals San José State University: SJSU ScholarWorks
institution Open Polar
collection San José State University: SJSU ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftsanjosestate
language unknown
topic Ecology
spellingShingle Ecology
Cooley, Lauren A.
Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
topic_facet Ecology
description Wildlife researchers must balance the need to safely capture and handle their study animals to sample tissues, collect morphological measurements, and attach dataloggers while simultaneously ensuring their results are not confounded by stress artifacts caused by handling. To determine the physiological effects of research activities including chemical immobilization, transport, instrumentation with biologgers, and overnight holding on a model marine mammal species, I collected hormone, blood chemistry, hematology, and heart rate data from 19 juvenile northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) throughout a translocation experiment. Across my six sampling timepoints, cortisol and aldosterone data revealed a moderate hormonal stress response to handling that was accompanied by minor changes in hematocrit, blood glucose, and blood lactate, but not ketone bodies or erythrocyte sedimentation rate. I also performed the first assessment of heart rate as a stress indicator in this species and found that mean heart rate, interbeat interval range, and apnea-eupnea cycles were influenced by handling. However, by the time seals were recaptured after several days at sea, all hormonal and hematological parameters had returned to baseline levels and 95% of study animals were resighted in the wild up to two years post-translocation. Together these findings suggest that while northern elephant seals exhibit mild physiological stress responses to handling activities in the short term, they recover rapidly and show no long-term deleterious effects, making them a robust species for ecological and physiological research.
format Text
author Cooley, Lauren A.
author_facet Cooley, Lauren A.
author_sort Cooley, Lauren A.
title Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
title_short Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
title_full Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
title_fullStr Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
title_full_unstemmed Research Handling Effects on Stress Hormones, Blood Parameters, and Heart Rate in Juvenile Northern Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
title_sort research handling effects on stress hormones, blood parameters, and heart rate in juvenile northern elephant seals (mirounga angustirostris)
publisher SJSU ScholarWorks
publishDate 2022
url https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/5256
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/context/etd_theses/article/8803/viewcontent/Cooley_s.PDF
genre Elephant Seals
genre_facet Elephant Seals
op_source Master's Theses
op_relation https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/5256
doi:10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/context/etd_theses/article/8803/viewcontent/Cooley_s.PDF
op_doi https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.qdnf-ch2x
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