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New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts


Plasma corticosterone concentrations in wild and captive juvenile tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus)

C. TYRRELL
A. CREE

Department of Zoology
University of Otago
P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, New Zealand

Abstract  High mortality and abnormal growth patterns commonly found in captive juvenile tuatara were hypothesised to be due in part to the effects of long-term chronic stress of captivity. This study compared plasma concentrations of the reptilian adrenal steroid, corticosterone, in wild juvenile tuatara on Stephens Island, Cook Strait, and in captive juveniles of Stephens Island origin, held in New Zealand institutions, in February and August 1992. Seasonal variation in plasma concentration of corticosterone in wild juveniles in four seasons of the year was also examined. This is the first study of seasonal cycles in plasma corticosterone in a wild juvenile reptile. Plasma corticosterone concentrations were significantly higher in captive juvenile females (4.21 +/- 0.27 ng/ml; mean +/- SE) compared with wild juvenile females (2.44 +/- 0.42 ng/ml) in February (P < 0.05), but not in August, and there was no difference in concentration between captive and wild juvenile males in either month. There was significant seasonal variation in plasma corticosterone in wild juvenile females (P < 0.05). However, there was no seasonal variation observed in wild juvenile males, and the magnitude of the variation in plasma corticosterone was low in both sexes (1.28 +/- 0 ng/ml - 4.65 +/- 3.41 ng/ml). Although mean plasma corticosterone was higher in captive juvenile females compared with wild juvenile females in February 1992, the value in captive females was within the range of mean plasma corticosterone concentrations observed in the seasonal study, and may be therefore due to asynchronicity of seasonal cycles, rather than stress. Further research is required; however, lack of correlation between plasma corticosterone concentrations and either growth rate or density indicate that captive juvenile tuatara in New Zealand are not suffering from pronounced chronic stress.

Keywords  tuatara; Sphenodon; corticosterone; juvenile; captivity; stress

New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 1994, Vol. 21: 407-416

0301-4223/2104-0407 $2.50/0   (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 1994

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (574K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


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