Mar. 5,
2013 — When people or animals are thrust into threatening situations such
as combat or attack by a predator, stress hormones are released to help prepare
the organism to defend itself or to rapidly escape from danger -- the so-called
fight-or-flight response.
Now University of Michigan researchers have demonstrated
for the first time that stress hormones are also responsible for altering the
body shape of developing animals, in this case the humble tadpole, so they are
better equipped to survive predator attacks.
Through a
series of experiments conducted at field sites and in the laboratory, U-M
researchers demonstrated that prolonged exposure to a stress hormone enabled
tadpoles to increase the size of their tails, which improved their ability to
avoid lethal predator attacks.
"This is
the first clear demonstration that a stress hormone produced by the animal can
actually cause a morphological change, a change in body shape, that improves
their survival in the presence of lethal predators. It's a survival response,"
said Robert Denver, a professor of molecular, cellular and developmental
biology and of ecology and evolutionary biology.
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