Reduction in baseline corticosterone secretion correlates with climate warming and drying across wild lizard populations

Archive ouverte

Dupoué, Andréaz | Rutschmann, Alexis | Le Galliard, Jean-François | Clobert, Jean | Blaimont, Pauline | Sinervo, Barry | Miles, Donald, B. | Haussy, Claudy | Meylan, Sandrine

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Climate change should lead to massive loss of biodiversity in most taxa, but the detailed physiological mechanisms underlying population extinction remain largely elusive so far. In vertebrates, baseline levels of hormones such as glucocorticoids (GCs) may be indicators of population state as their secretion to chronic stress can impair survival and reproduction. However, the relationship between GC secretion, climate change and population extinction risk remains unclear. In this study, we investigated whether levels of baseline corticosterone (the main GCs in reptiles) correlate with environmental conditions and associated extinction risk across wild populations of the common lizard Zootoca vivipara. First, we performed a cross‐sectional comparison of baseline corticosterone levels along an altitudinal gradient among 14 populations. Then, we used a longitudinal study in eight populations to examine the changes in corticosterone levels following the exposure to a heatwave period. Unexpectedly, baseline corticosterone decreased with increasing thermal conditions at rest in females and was not correlated with extinction risk. In addition, baseline corticosterone levels decreased after exposure to an extreme heatwave period. This seasonal corticosterone decrease was more pronounced in populations without access to standing water. We suggest that low basal secretion of corticosterone may entail downregulating activity levels and limit exposure to adverse climatic conditions, especially to reduce water loss. These new insights suggest that rapid population decline might be preceded by a downregulation of the corticosterone secretion.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Intense nocturnal warming alters growth strategies, colouration and parasite load in a diurnal lizard

Archive ouverte | Rutschmann, Alexis | CCSD

International audience. High species diversity is generally thought to be a requirement for sustaining forest multifunctionality. However, the degree to which the relationship between species-, structural-, and trai...

Lizards from warm and declining populations are born with extremely short telomeres

Archive ouverte | Dupoué, Andréaz | CCSD

International audience. Aging is the price to pay for acquiring and processing energy through cellular activity and life history productivity. Climate warming can exacerbate the inherent pace of aging, as illustrate...

Interaction of hydric and thermal conditions drive geographic variation in thermoregulation in a widespread lizard

Archive ouverte | Rozen‐rechels, David | CCSD

International audience. Behavioral thermoregulation is an efficient mechanism to buffer the physiological effects of climate change. Thermal ecology studies have traditionally tested how thermal constraints shape th...

Chargement des enrichissements...