For each citation that was shared on social media (LinkedIn, Facebook, or Twitter) with the “@GenScript” tag, the author will be rewarded with a $10 Amazon gift card or 2,000 GS points.

A novel larval diet interacts with nutritional stress to modify juvenile behaviors and glucocorticoid responses

Ecol Evol. 2021-07; 
Cristina C Ledón-Rettig, Sarah R Lagon
Products/Services Used Details Operation
Protein and Antibody Isolation … Adult breeding pairs were injected with luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH; GenScript RP11937) and allowed to mate overnight; females and males were given approximately 12 and 6 µl of (1 µg/100 µl) hormone, respectively … Get A Quote

Abstract

Developmental plasticity can allow the exploitation of alternative diets. While such flexibility during early life is often adaptive, it can leave a legacy in later life that alters the overall health and fitness of an individual. Species of the spadefoot toad genus are uniquely poised to address such carryover effects because their larvae can consume drastically different diets: their ancestral diet of detritus or a derived shrimp diet. Here, we use to assess the effects of developmental plasticity in response to larval diet type and nutritional stress on juvenile behaviors and stress axis reactivity. We find that, in an open-field assay, juveniles fed shrimp as larvae have longer latencies to move, avoid p... More

Keywords

carryover effects, catch‐up growth, compensatory growth, corticosterone, stress axis, trophic polyphenism