Critical disease windows shaped by stress exposure alter allocation trade‐offs between development and immunity

Nov 3, 2017The Journal of animal ecology

Stress during key times changes how the body balances growth and immune defense

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Abstract

Chronic exposure to corticosterone decreased survival and delayed metamorphosis in wood frog larvae infected with ranavirus.

  • Corticosterone treatments suppressed splenocyte proliferation in wood frog larvae, affecting immune function.
  • Viral replication rate increased only with chronic corticosterone exposure, indicating a distinct immune response.
  • Acute corticosterone exposure accelerated metamorphosis and increased survival in infected larvae, suggesting a different dynamic.
  • Interactions between stress exposure and infection may create resource trade-offs that influence developmental and immune responses.
  • Critical disease windows are likely affected by stress exposure, altering susceptibility to pathogens.

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