AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the hormonal patterns (testosterone and cortisol) associated with the "musth" phenomenon in male Asian elephants, finding that all subjects had regular annual musth cycles and generally did not show chronically elevated cortisol outside of these periods.
  • - It revealed that while testosterone levels decreased with age, cortisol responses varied among individuals, with older bulls showing significant changes during musth.
  • - The research emphasizes the need for long-term monitoring of hormones to better understand the health and welfare of endangered species, particularly how physiological factors interact with social and health variables.

Article Abstract

The conservation of endangered species and sustainability of managed populations requires considerations to ensure the health and welfare of individuals. Male elephants experience a biological phenomenon called "musth", which is characterized by increased testosterone production, temporal gland secretion and urine dribbling, heightened aggression and sexual behavior, and therefore can pose unique challenges for human safety and animal welfare. This study characterized longitudinal (9 to 22 years) patterns of circulating testosterone and cortisol in relation to musth in four adult Asian elephant bulls spanning ages from 12 to 54 years. Age-related effects on musth activity and adrenal responses to social changes and clinical health events were also examined. All bulls exhibited regular annual musth cycles. Circulating cortisol covaried positively with testosterone and musth, highlighting intrinsic patterns that should be considered when evaluating the impact of social, health, and environmental changes on adrenal glucocorticoid activity. Except for an end-of-life cortisol increase in one bull, there was no clear evidence of chronically elevated cortisol secretion outside of musth in any individual. Testosterone decreased with age in sexually mature bulls, whereas age-related changes in cortisol varied across individuals, with the three older bulls showing the greatest rate of change during musth versus inter-musth periods. In contrast to physiological factors, there was no evidence of social factors, such as addition of a new male and death of male herdmates, impacting adrenal glucocorticoid activity in these bulls in the short term. Changes in cortisol were associated with treatment for () in two bulls, increasing after start of treatment and decreasing with cessation of treatment, but were not clearly associated with activation of disease. This study highlights the importance of longitudinal hormone monitoring to track changes in physiological function and responses to social, health, and environmental change in elephant bulls, which is important for making more informed decisions on how to manage male elephants under varying degrees of human care to ensure welfare and safety.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9137588PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12101332DOI Listing

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