Kathleen E. Hunt, Ph.D.,
Charles Innis, V.M.D., Dipl. A.B.V.P. (Reptile and Amphibian), and Rosalind M.
Rolland, D.V.M.
From the New England Aquarium,
1 Central Wharf, Boston, Massachusetts 02110, USA (Hunt, Innis, Rolland).
Correspondence should be directed to Dr. Hunt (huntk@neaq.org).
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife
Medicine 43(3):479-493. 2012
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1638/2011-0149R1.1
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1638/2011-0149R1.1
Abstract:
Kemp's ridley sea turtles
(Lepidochelys kempii), a critically endangered species, frequently strand on
the shores of Cape Cod (Massachusetts, USA) in late autumn in a state of
“cold-stunning” exhibiting low body temperature and related clinical issues. Stranded
turtles are transported to the New England Aquarium (Boston, Massachusetts,
USA) for treatment and rehabilitation. This study tested the hypothesis that
cold-stunned sea turtles might exhibit high corticosterone (“stress hormone”)
or low thyroxine (which is often affected by temperature), or both, and that
monitoring of both hormones may be useful for assessing recovery. In a
retrospective analysis, 87 archived plasma samples were assayed from 56
cold-stunned juvenile Kemp's ridley sea turtles for corticosterone and free
thyroxine (fT4). Upon admission, mean corticosterone was the highest yet
reported for a population of sea turtles (39.3 ± 2.5 ng/ml; mean ± standard
error of the mean [SEM]) and fT4 was usually undetectable. On admission,
corticosterone was negatively correlated with white blood cell count but was
not correlated with blood glucose. There were no differences in either hormone
between survivors and nonsurvivors on admission. After 18+ days in recovery,
surviving turtles' corticosterone dropped significantly to levels typical of
baseline in other species (0.9 ± 1.0 ng/ml) while fT4 increased significantly
(1.3 ± 1.5 pg/ml). During recovery, corticosterone was positively correlated
with blood glucose and was not correlated with white blood cell count. Turtles
that showed persistent deficits in feeding, activity, or both during recovery
had significantly lower fT4 than did turtles with no such deficits. The “high
corticosterone, low fT4” endocrine profile seen on admission may be a useful marker
of cold-stunning in this and other species. Further studies are necessary to
determine whether low thyroid hormones play a causal role in deficits in
feeding and activity during recovery. Monitoring of both hormones may be useful
for triage, monitoring of recovery, and assessing readiness for release.
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