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Assessing Allostatic Load in Ring-Tailed Lemurs (Lemur catta)
- Source :
- Animals, Volume 11, Issue 11, Animals, Vol 11, Iss 3074, p 3074 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Responses to stress are unavoidable, adaptive mechanisms in humans and non-human animals. However, in humans, chronic stress has been linked to poor health outcomes and early mortality. Allostatic load, the physiologic dysregulation that occurs when an organism is exposed to chronic stressors, has been used to assess stress in humans<br />less work has been done using non-human primates. Our aim was to determine the relationship between allostatic load in ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta) under human care and potentially stressful individual, social, medical and husbandry factors, as well a sex and age. An allostatic load index (ALI) was calculated for 38 lemurs using six biomarkers measured in serum (albumin, cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate, DNA damage, glucose and prostaglandin E2). Potentially stressful factors were recorded over the lifetime of each lemur using medical and husbandry records. Animals with a higher percentage of time spent indoors, those kept in smaller average group sizes, and those with fewer minor group composition changes had, or tended to have, higher ALI. There was no relationship between ALI and sex or age. Some social and husbandry factors were associated with allostatic load in lemurs, indicating that this index may be a useful tool in assessing and determining factors contributing to stress of lemurs and other animals under human care.
- Subjects :
- Lemur catta
Veterinary medicine
Physiology
Lemur
Health outcomes
biology.animal
SF600-1100
Medicine
Chronic stress
chronic stress
allostatic load index
General Veterinary
biology
business.industry
Stressor
Ring tailed lemurs
Animal husbandry
biology.organism_classification
Allostatic load
QL1-991
stressors
Animal Science and Zoology
non-human primates
business
Zoology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20762615
- Volume :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Animals
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....da2aa490fd206611c452ae0f2b1f5e75