Journal of Zoological and Botanical Gardens (Sep 2023)

Allostatic Load Index Effectively Measures Chronic Stress Status in Zoo-Housed Giraffes

  • Haley N. Beer,
  • Lisa K. Karr,
  • Trenton C. Shrader,
  • Dustin T. Yates

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg4030044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. 623 – 636

Abstract

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For giraffes, few standardized methods exist for quantifying chronic stress. Allostatic load index is quantified from a panel of multi-system stress biomarkers to estimate cumulative stress. Our objective was to determine whether a panel of biomarkers selected for their role in allostatic load would reflect the number of documented stress events experienced by giraffes. Cortisol, DHEA-S, cholesterol, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), and fructosamine were determined in serum samples from zoo-housed giraffes (n = 18). These were correlated with the overall number and frequency of ZIMS-documented stress events experienced prior to blood collection. We also compared giraffes grouped by high vs. low total stress events and event frequencies. Giraffes experiencing higher total stress events tended to have 1.65-fold greater (p p p p p < 0.10) with total stress events. These findings indicate that the allostatic load index robustly reflected total cumulative stress events for these giraffes and was more consistent than the individual biomarkers used for its calculation. We conclude that allostatic load index is a promising tool for assessing stress in captive giraffes, although revision of the biomarker panel is warranted.

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