The effects of different sample storage conditions on faecal corticosterone metabolite measurements in northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus)
Hannah N Suber, Jeremiah Leach, Ashley Kaskocsak, Henry Valencia, Sarah Colette, Ronald J Kendall

TL;DR
This study examines how different storage conditions affect stress hormone measurements in northern bobwhite feces, finding that results vary by sex and storage method.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into how sample storage affects corticosterone metabolite measurements in male and female northern bobwhite.
Findings
Female fecal corticosterone metabolite concentrations did not differ significantly between frozen and environmentally exposed samples.
Immediate extraction led to significantly lower corticosterone metabolite concentrations in female samples.
Male samples frozen immediately had significantly lower concentrations compared to environmentally exposed male and frozen female samples.
Abstract
The northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) is an economically and ecologically vital gamebird in North America experiencing vast population declines. With the recent validation of an enzyme immunoassay to detect corticosterone metabolites in faeces, there are many opportunities for its scientific application. Corticosterone, a key avian stress-related hormone, has many beneficial functions that support a quail’s immune response, primarily by suppressing inflammation, allowing cells to function more efficiently. However, chronic levels of elevated corticosterone in Aves have been shown to cause metabolic disruption and suppressed reproduction and growth. Determining root causes of chronically elevated corticosterone levels is vital for bobwhite conservation efforts. Proposed research investigating causes of bobwhite stress includes examining the effects of pesticides, climate, disease…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMeat and Animal Product Quality · Physiological and biochemical adaptations · Marine animal studies overview
