Title (eng)
Getting used to it? Stress of repeated management procedures in semi-domesticated reindeer
Author
Leif Egil Loe
Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås, Norway
Alina L. Evans
Department of Forestry and Wildlife Management, Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, Campus Evenstad, Elverum, Norway
Per Medbøe Thorsby
Hormone Laboratory, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biochemical Endocrinology and Metabolism Research Group, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway / Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Erik Ropstad
Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Life Sciences, Ås, Norway
L. Monica Trondrud
Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås, Norway
Abstract (eng)
Background
Extensive animal production systems, such as reindeer may represent a system to further study the context dependence of stress responses and the potential implications for animal welfare. We investigated short- and longer-term stress responses to repeated herding, handling and restraint and its potential effect on animal welfare in semi-domesticated adult female reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus). Research on food animal stress and welfare has primarily focused on intensive animal production systems whereas extensive production systems, such as reindeer are underrepresented. We also assessed seasonal differences and the potential effect of the additional stressor of calf removal using serum concentrations of corticosteroids (cortisol and corticosterone), their precursors (11-desoxcortisol, 17-α-hydroxyprogesterone and deoxycorticosterone) and catecholamine metabolites (metanephrine and normetanephrine) in combination with the immunological stress proxy leukocyte coping capacity (LCC) and rectal temperature. Additionally, we assessed the interconnections among different stress indices and their suitability as stress indicators to evaluate handling-induced stress in reindeer, where rectal temperature, other than serum cortisol levels, emerged as a robust and integrative stress parameter.
Results
Herding, handling, and restraint elicited a marked and seasonally different short-term stress response with higher stress mediator levels in winter. Further, females who had their calf removed shortly after parturition showed increased stress levels based on LCC. The repeated exposure to the same stressors led to a habituation, with decreasing levels of stress indices to the procedure in both seasons. This outcome implies that reindeer females in the present study were able to cope well with repeated manipulations and that this intensification may not compromise animal welfare. Notably, the traditional stress index body temperature correlated with various stress indices encompassing the HPA axis response (cortisol and corticosterone in summer and additionally cortisone and 11-deoxycortisol in winter), the sympathetic-adrenal-medullary system (metanephrine) as well as the immunological response to stress (LCC), in both seasons.
Conclusion
Our results emphasise body (rectal) temperature as a robust and integrative stress parameter and that stress monitoring is robust to methodological variation. Our findings add to a foundation for evaluating available stress indices in different individual and environmental contexts and may contribute to improved animal management practices aimed at reducing stress levels and enhancing animal welfare.
Description (eng)
Data underlying the publication "Getting used to it? Stress of repeated management procedures in semi-domesticated reindeer". doi.org/10.1186/s12917-025-04718-8
Keywords (eng)
ReindeerRangifer tarandusstress responsecatecholaminesglucocorticoidsleukocyte coping capacityLCChabituation
Type (eng)
Language
[eng]
Persistent identifier
Funder (eng)
Council of Norway
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- DetailsUploaderResource typeDataFormatapplication/x-zip-compressedCreated19.02.2025 12:07:25 UTC
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