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Title

Adrenocortical and bioenergetic responses to cold in laboratory-born northern red-backed voles ( Myodes rutilus) from two populations in south Siberia, Russia.

Authors

Polikarpov, I.A.; Titova, T.V.; Kondratyuk, E.Yu.; Novikov, E.A.

Abstract

In animal populations inhabiting ecologically suboptimal environmental conditions, phenotypical shifts in physiological traits responsible for coping with environmental challenges can be expected. If such variations are of heritable origin, then they will manifest themselves even in individuals bred in captivity. In laboratory-born red-backed voles ( Myodes rutilus (Pallas, 1779)) originating from a population with constantly low density, maximum cold-induced metabolic rates were higher than in voles from a high-density population, similar to the data obtained on wild-caught individuals from the same populations. However, unlike wild-caught voles, in laboratory-born individuals maintained under comfortable conditions, we revealed no interpopulation differences either in basal plasma corticosterone level or in corticosterone response to acute cooling. These data confirm the suggestion about the heritable origin of increased maximum cold-induced metabolic rate in a red-backed vole population with relatively low density.

Subjects

CLETHRIONOMYS rutilus; RODENT physiology; ANIMAL population density; HABITATS; ANIMAL adaptation; PHYSIOLOGY

Publication

Canadian Journal of Zoology, 2018, Vol 96, Issue 7, p660

ISSN

0008-4301

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1139/cjz-2016-0314

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