Bs. Wilson et Jc. Wingfield, SEASONAL AND INTERPOPULATIONAL VARIATION IN PLASMA-LEVELS OF CORTICOSTERONE IN THE SIDE-BLOTCHED LIZARD (UTA STANSBURIANA), Physiological zoology, 67(4), 1994, pp. 1025-1049
We examine seasonal and interpopulational variation in field levels of
corticosterone (B) in the lizard Uta stansburiana. Corticosterone is
the primary reptilian glucocorticosteroid, and elevated levels of this
hormone have been correlated with physiological stress under both fie
ld and laboratory conditions. Patterns of seasonal variation in plasma
B were generally similar in males and females, with peaks coinciding
with periods of peak reproductive activity (males) or peak reproductiv
e condition (females). Levels of circulating B usually declined as the
activity season progressed and were lowest in fate summer, especially
among males at desert sites-including our southernmost site, where li
zards exhibited poor body condition as a result of drought. Variation
in B levels among populations was probably attributable to variation i
n the timing of seasonal samples (e.g., in relation to peaks in reprod
uctive activity). Apparently these populations did not experience seri
ous (i.e., debilitating) physiological stress, as the highest recorded
levels were lower than those of captive-stressed U. stansburiana. Thi
s suggests that corticosterone levels simply parallel annual patterns
of activity, especially reproduction. These findings agree with other
studies that have indicated a positive, rather than a negative associa
tion between glucocorticosteroid secretion and reproductive activity.
These results also suggest that basal (baseline) levels of B in free-l
iving animals may not be indicative of the degree of ''stress.''