2015
DOI: 10.1890/es14-00345.1
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Telomere length is a strong predictor of foraging behavior in a long‐lived seabird

Abstract: Abstract. Telomeres are an increasingly studied component of physiological ecology. However, in longlived birds a large telomere loss with chronological age is not the norm. Telomeres are now regarded less as a chronological aging tool and more as an indicator of individual quality, residual lifespan, or biological age. If telomeres indicate biological aging processes, then they should also be associated with other variables that change with age, especially foraging and reproductive behaviors. This study compa… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(69 reference statements)
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“…ΔTL was usually calculated from 1 yr to the following year, but in 4 cases telomeres were re-sampled after 2 yr; in these cases, ΔTL was divided by 2 to indicate mean annual change. In addition to wintering variables, we include other measures likely to affect migration and TL: year (of global location sensing deployment, first capture), sex (Young et al 2013(Young et al , 2015, colony (Young et al 2015), body size (Barrett et al 2013, Orben et al 2015, body mass, and the annual change in body mass. Twenty-three birds had complete data and could be used in this analysis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…ΔTL was usually calculated from 1 yr to the following year, but in 4 cases telomeres were re-sampled after 2 yr; in these cases, ΔTL was divided by 2 to indicate mean annual change. In addition to wintering variables, we include other measures likely to affect migration and TL: year (of global location sensing deployment, first capture), sex (Young et al 2013(Young et al , 2015, colony (Young et al 2015), body size (Barrett et al 2013, Orben et al 2015, body mass, and the annual change in body mass. Twenty-three birds had complete data and could be used in this analysis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Long TL may indicate high-quality individuals (Le Vaillant et al 2015) that may have invested heavily in offspring, behaviorally or energetically. TL in murres is associated with breeding season foraging patterns, especially depth and choice of water masses (Young et al 2015). Behavioral changes such as increased depth and trip duration led to higher post-breeding stress in rhinoceros auklets , and similar patterns may drive post-breeding stress in murre fCORT as well.…”
Section: Tl and Wintering Variablesmentioning
confidence: 98%
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