Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers

Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri) were followed throughout their annual cycle along the Pacific Coast of North America. Changes in body condition and corticosterone were tracked at two overwintering sites (Ensenada, Mexico, and San Diego, California), four migration stopover sites (Bodega Bay, Cal...

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Main Authors: O'Reilly, Kathleen M., Wingfield, John C.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Pilot Scholars 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pilotscholars.up.edu/bio_facpubs/2
https://pilotscholars.up.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=bio_facpubs
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spelling ftunivportland:oai:pilotscholars.up.edu:bio_facpubs-1004 2023-05-15T17:24:01+02:00 Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers O'Reilly, Kathleen M. Wingfield, John C. 2003-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://pilotscholars.up.edu/bio_facpubs/2 https://pilotscholars.up.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=bio_facpubs unknown Pilot Scholars https://pilotscholars.up.edu/bio_facpubs/2 https://pilotscholars.up.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=bio_facpubs Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations Breeding calidris mauri corticosterone fat reserves migration stress Western Sandpiper Zoology text 2003 ftunivportland 2022-02-09T18:59:02Z Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri) were followed throughout their annual cycle along the Pacific Coast of North America. Changes in body condition and corticosterone were tracked at two overwintering sites (Ensenada, Mexico, and San Diego, California), four migration stopover sites (Bodega Bay, California, Grays Harbor and False Bay, Washington, and Hartney Bay, Alaska), and a breeding site (Nome, Alaska). Adult males and females had elevated weight and fat scores during spring migration, breeding, and autumn migration relative to lean levels during winter. Although elevated mass and fat reserves may hinder escape from predators and are not necessary at wintering sites with benign conditions, the cost-benefit trade-offs with weight and agility shift during migration and breeding. Extra fat and muscle are necessary for fueling the long flight to and from the breeding grounds and serve as a hedge against unpredictable food and weather conditions on the breeding grounds. First-year birds weighed less and had lower fat reserves at smaller stopover sites than migrants at a large stopover site. Plasma levels of corticosterone revealed seasonal differences in the adrenocortical response to stress, although initial levels were fairly consistent across seasons. The highest stress response of the annual cycle in males was during autumn migration, in contrast to the lowest levels during early spring migration, breeding, and overwintering. Late-spring migrants and autumn premigrants had intermediate stress responses. An emerging pattern from this and other shorebird studies is that migrants with imminent flights of more than 1000 km have elevated corticosterone levels. Text Nome Alaska University of Portland: Pilot Scholars False Bay ENVELOPE(-60.366,-60.366,-62.716,-62.716) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Portland: Pilot Scholars
op_collection_id ftunivportland
language unknown
topic Breeding
calidris mauri
corticosterone
fat reserves
migration
stress
Western Sandpiper
Zoology
spellingShingle Breeding
calidris mauri
corticosterone
fat reserves
migration
stress
Western Sandpiper
Zoology
O'Reilly, Kathleen M.
Wingfield, John C.
Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers
topic_facet Breeding
calidris mauri
corticosterone
fat reserves
migration
stress
Western Sandpiper
Zoology
description Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri) were followed throughout their annual cycle along the Pacific Coast of North America. Changes in body condition and corticosterone were tracked at two overwintering sites (Ensenada, Mexico, and San Diego, California), four migration stopover sites (Bodega Bay, California, Grays Harbor and False Bay, Washington, and Hartney Bay, Alaska), and a breeding site (Nome, Alaska). Adult males and females had elevated weight and fat scores during spring migration, breeding, and autumn migration relative to lean levels during winter. Although elevated mass and fat reserves may hinder escape from predators and are not necessary at wintering sites with benign conditions, the cost-benefit trade-offs with weight and agility shift during migration and breeding. Extra fat and muscle are necessary for fueling the long flight to and from the breeding grounds and serve as a hedge against unpredictable food and weather conditions on the breeding grounds. First-year birds weighed less and had lower fat reserves at smaller stopover sites than migrants at a large stopover site. Plasma levels of corticosterone revealed seasonal differences in the adrenocortical response to stress, although initial levels were fairly consistent across seasons. The highest stress response of the annual cycle in males was during autumn migration, in contrast to the lowest levels during early spring migration, breeding, and overwintering. Late-spring migrants and autumn premigrants had intermediate stress responses. An emerging pattern from this and other shorebird studies is that migrants with imminent flights of more than 1000 km have elevated corticosterone levels.
format Text
author O'Reilly, Kathleen M.
Wingfield, John C.
author_facet O'Reilly, Kathleen M.
Wingfield, John C.
author_sort O'Reilly, Kathleen M.
title Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers
title_short Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers
title_full Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers
title_fullStr Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal, Age, and Sex Differences in Weight, Fat Reserves, and Plasma Corticosterone in Western Sandpipers
title_sort seasonal, age, and sex differences in weight, fat reserves, and plasma corticosterone in western sandpipers
publisher Pilot Scholars
publishDate 2003
url https://pilotscholars.up.edu/bio_facpubs/2
https://pilotscholars.up.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=bio_facpubs
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.366,-60.366,-62.716,-62.716)
geographic False Bay
Pacific
geographic_facet False Bay
Pacific
genre Nome
Alaska
genre_facet Nome
Alaska
op_source Biology Faculty Publications and Presentations
op_relation https://pilotscholars.up.edu/bio_facpubs/2
https://pilotscholars.up.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=bio_facpubs
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