2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156359
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Higher mercury contamination is associated with shorter telomeres in a long-lived seabird – A direct effect or a consequence of among-individual variation in phenotypic quality?

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1

Citation Types

0
2
0

Year Published

2022
2022
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
5

Relationship

0
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
references
References 70 publications
(94 reference statements)
0
2
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Birds represent the best studied class of wild vertebrates in terms of telomeres (Criscuolo, Dobson & Schull, 2021) with most studies falling into one of four broad categories: ecotoxicological studies, stress‐associated studies, migration‐related studies, and age‐model studies. As in other organisms, telomere length has been shown to decrease at an increased rate in response to toxins or contaminants in birds, including Arctic‐breeding black‐legged kittiwakes [ Rissa tridactyla (Linnaeus)] (Blévin et al ., 2016), and Cory's shearwaters [ Calonectris borealis (Cory)] (Bauch et al ., 2022). In stress‐associated studies, telomere length dynamics were compared to environmental stressors including noise (Dorado‐Correa et al ., 2018; Grunst et al ., 2020), an urban environment (Salmón et al ., 2016; Ibáñez‐Álamo et al ., 2018), or anthropogenic activity (Caccavo et al ., 2021) as well as social factors such as brood size (Voillemot et al ., 2012; Quirici et al ., 2016; Criscuolo, Zahn & Bize, 2017, Noguera & Velando, 2021), brood parasitism (Soler et al ., 2015), proximity to predators (Kärkkäinen et al ., 2019), and social isolation (Aydinonat et al ., 2014).…”
Section: Biological Clocks and Agementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Birds represent the best studied class of wild vertebrates in terms of telomeres (Criscuolo, Dobson & Schull, 2021) with most studies falling into one of four broad categories: ecotoxicological studies, stress‐associated studies, migration‐related studies, and age‐model studies. As in other organisms, telomere length has been shown to decrease at an increased rate in response to toxins or contaminants in birds, including Arctic‐breeding black‐legged kittiwakes [ Rissa tridactyla (Linnaeus)] (Blévin et al ., 2016), and Cory's shearwaters [ Calonectris borealis (Cory)] (Bauch et al ., 2022). In stress‐associated studies, telomere length dynamics were compared to environmental stressors including noise (Dorado‐Correa et al ., 2018; Grunst et al ., 2020), an urban environment (Salmón et al ., 2016; Ibáñez‐Álamo et al ., 2018), or anthropogenic activity (Caccavo et al ., 2021) as well as social factors such as brood size (Voillemot et al ., 2012; Quirici et al ., 2016; Criscuolo, Zahn & Bize, 2017, Noguera & Velando, 2021), brood parasitism (Soler et al ., 2015), proximity to predators (Kärkkäinen et al ., 2019), and social isolation (Aydinonat et al ., 2014).…”
Section: Biological Clocks and Agementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because they are associated with longevity and survival in vertebrates, telomeres represent a physiological marker that may be useful to estimate the toxicological consequences of contaminant exposure (Sebastiano et al, 2020). A recent study has reported that higher feather Hg concentration was associated with shorter te-lomeres in Cory's Shearwater Calonectris borealis (Bauch et al, 2022). However, to date only a few studies have explored telomere-contaminant relationships in Arctic free-living birds, mainly in relation to organic pollutants (Sletten et al, 2016;Blévin et al, 2016Blévin et al, , 2017Eckbo et al, 2019;Sebastiano et al, 2020).…”
Section: Oxidative Stress and Telomeresmentioning
confidence: 99%