Early Oxidative Stress May Prevent a Red Ornament From Signaling Longevity
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2024
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Wiley
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Romero-Haro, A.A., Cantarero, A. and Alonso-Alvarez, C. (2024), Early Oxidative Stress May Prevent a Red Ornament From Signaling Longevity. Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology. https://doi.org/10.1002/jez.2868
Abstract
Harsh early environmental conditions can exert delayed, long-lasting effects on phenotypes, including reproductive traits such as sexual signals. Indeed, adverse early conditions can accelerate development, increasing oxidative stress that may, in turn, impact adult sexual signals. Among signals, colorations produced by red ketocarotenoids seem to depend on mitochondrial functioning. Hence, they could reveal individual cell respiration efficiency. It has been hypothesized that these traits are unfalsifiable “index” signals of condition due to their deep connection to individual metabolism. Since mitochondrial dysfunction is frequently linked to aging, red ketocarotenoid-based ornaments could also be good signals of a critical fitness component: longevity. We tested this red color per longevity correlation in captive zebra finches. In addition, we experimentally decreased the synthesis of glutathione (a critical intracellular antioxidant) during the first days of the birds' life to resemble harsh early environmental conditions (e.g., undernutrition). Longevity was recorded until the death of the last bird (almost 9 years). Males, but not females, exhibiting a redder bill in early adulthood lived longer than males with paler bills, which agrees with some precedent studies. However, such bill redness—longevity connection was absent among males with inhibited glutathione synthesis. These findings may suggest that environmental factors can alter the reliability of red ketocarotenoid-based sexual signals, making them less unfalsifiable than believed.
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A.A.R. H. fue financiado por una beca de Formación de Personal de Investigación (BES-2010-035013; Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, MINECO, Gobierno de España) y apoyada por el programa de investigación e innovación Horizonte 2020 de la Unión Europea bajo el acuerdo de subvención Marie Skłodowska-Curie 842085 y por un contrato postdoctoral María Zambrano (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha) del Programa de Recualificación del Sistema Universitario Español (Ministerio de Universidades de España) financiado por la Unión Europea - NextGenerationEU (acuerdo de subvención MZ2021: 2022-POST-21023).













