Article

Exposure to food insecurity increases energy storage and reduces somatic maintenance in European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris)

Details

Citation

Andrews C, Zuidersma E, Verhulst S, Nettle D & Bateson M (2021) Exposure to food insecurity increases energy storage and reduces somatic maintenance in European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris). Royal Society Open Science, 8, Art. No.: 211099. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.211099

Abstract
Birds exposed to food insecurity—defined as temporally variable access to food—respond adaptively by storing more energy. To do this, they may reduce energy allocation to other functions such as somatic maintenance and repair. To investigate this trade-off, we exposed juvenile European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris, n = 69) to 19 weeks of either uninterrupted food availability or a regime where food was unpredictably unavailable for a 5-h period on 5 days each week. Our measures of energy storage were mass and fat scores. Our measures of somatic maintenance were the growth rate of a plucked feather, and erythrocyte telomere length (TL), measured by analysis of the terminal restriction fragment. The insecure birds were heavier than the controls, by an amount that varied over time. They also had higher fat scores. We found no evidence that they consumed more food overall, though our food consumption data were incomplete. Plucked feathers regrew more slowly in the insecure birds. TL was reduced in the insecure birds, specifically, in the longer percentiles of the within-individual TL distribution. We conclude that increased energy storage in response to food insecurity is achieved at the expense of investment in somatic maintenance and repair.

Keywords
insurance hypothesis; telomeres; food insecurity; starlings; somatic maintenance; birds

Journal
Royal Society Open Science: Volume 8

StatusPublished
FundersEuropean Commission (Horizon 2020)
Publication date30/09/2021
Publication date online15/09/2021
Date accepted by journal24/08/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33385
eISSN2054-5703

People (1)

Dr Clare Andrews

Dr Clare Andrews

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

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