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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying Glucocorticoid Plasticity Using Reaction Norm Approaches: There Still is So Much to Discover!

TLDR
In this paper, the authors highlight the insights gained by repeatedly assessing an individual's glucocorticoid concentrations along a gradient of environmental or internal conditions using a "reaction norm approach".
Abstract
Hormones are highly responsive internal signals that help organisms adjust their phenotype to fluctuations in environmental and internal conditions. Our knowledge of the causes and consequences of variations in circulating hormone concentrations has improved greatly in the past. However, this knowledge comes from population-level studies which generally tend to make the flawed assumption that all individuals respond in the same way to environmental changes. Here, we advocate that we can vastly expand our understanding of the ecology and evolution of hormonal traits once we acknowledge the existence of individual differences by quantifying hormonal plasticity at the individual level, where selection acts. In this review, we use glucocorticoid hormones as examples of highly plastic endocrine traits that interact intimately with energy metabolism but also with other organismal traits like behavior and physiology. First, we highlight the insights gained by repeatedly assessing an individual's glucocorticoid concentrations along a gradient of environmental or internal conditions using a 'reaction norm approach'. This study design should be followed by a hierarchical statistical partitioning of the total endocrine variance into the among-individual component (individual differences in average hormone concentrations, i.e. in the intercept of the reaction norm) and the residual (within-individual) component. The latter is ideally further partitioned by estimating more precisely the hormonal plasticity (i.e. the slope of the reaction norm), which allows to test whether individuals differ in the degree of hormonal change along the gradient. Second, we critically review the published evidence for glucocorticoid variation, focusing mostly on among- and within-individual levels, finding only a good handful of studies that used repeated-measures designs and random regression statistics to investigate glucocorticoid plasticity. These studies indicate that individuals can differ in both the intercept and the slope of their glucocorticoid reaction norm to a known gradient. Third, we suggest rewarding avenues for future work on hormonal reaction norms, for example to uncover potential costs and trade-offs associated with glucocorticoid plasticity or to test whether glucocorticoid plasticity varies when an individual's reaction norm is repeatedly assessed along the same gradient, whether reaction norms in glucocorticoids covary with those in other traits like behavior and fitness (generating multivariate plasticity) or to quantify glucocorticoid reaction norms along multiple external and internal gradients that act simultaneously (leading to multidimensional plasticity). Throughout this review we emphasize the power that reaction norm approaches offer for resolving unanswered questions in ecological and evolutionary endocrinology.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating theoretical and empirical approaches for a robust understanding of endocrine flexibility.

TL;DR: This Review introduces and defines endocrine flexibility, reviews existing studies, makes suggestions for future empirical work, and recommends mathematical modeling approaches to complement empirical work and significantly advance the understanding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic integration of behavioural and endocrine components of the stress response

- 11 Feb 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this article , the authors demonstrate that acute stress response components in Trinidadian guppies are both heritable and integrated on the major axis of genetic covariation, leading to a prediction of genetic integration of these traits.
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Optimal hormonal regulation when stressor cues are imperfect

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors use a mathematical model to examine the effect of imperfect information about the environment on hormone regulation and find that mistakes caused by imperfect cues are commonly responsible for changes in average hormone levels, but imperfect cues also cause individuals to be slower and less certain in their updated estimates of the environmental state.
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Who cares? An integrative approach to understanding the evolution of behavioural plasticity in parental care

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explore how mechanisms involved in behavioural plasticity in individuals may (or may not) be co-opted to generate behavioural variation among individuals, between sexes and across species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Two formulas for computation of the area under the curve represent measures of total hormone concentration versus time-dependent change

TL;DR: It is shown that depending on which formula is used, different associations with other variables may emerge, and it is recommended to employ both formulas when analyzing data sets with repeated measures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The concept of allostasis in biology and biomedicine.

TL;DR: The concept of allostasis is discussed, maintaining stability through change, as a fundamental process through which organisms actively adjust to both predictable and unpredictable events, using the balance between energy input and expenditure as the basis for applying the concept.
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Coping styles in animals: current status in behavior and stress-physiology.

TL;DR: This paper summarizes the current views on coping styles as a useful concept in understanding individual adaptive capacity and vulnerability to stress-related disease and indicates the existence of a proactive and a reactive coping style in feral populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution of Phenotypic Plasticity in Plants

TL;DR: This review focuses on issues related to the evolution of phenotypic plasticity in plants-factors responsible for differences in plasticity between populations or species, the presence of plasticity variation among taxa, the relationship between character correlations and character plasticities, and the assessment of the ecological role of phenotypesic Plasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive phenotypic plasticity: consensus and controversy.

TL;DR: Current issues are laid out and the areas of consensus and controversy surrounding the evolution of plasticity and the reaction norm (the set of phenotypes produced by a genotype over a range of environments) are summarized.
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