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A snowshoe hare in winter (all photos by Alice Kenney)

Animals can handle the stress

Chronic stress causes pathology in humans, but not wild animals

A snowshoe hare in the wild leads a stressful life, liable at any moment to become someone’s dinner. But unlike humans faced with constant stress, hares don’t develop ulcers, heart disease, or depression.

Rudy Boonstra says that while chronic stress often makes humans sick, harms their memory, and shortens their lives, wild animals have adapted to deal with it. Some of them don’t seem to react at all to constant stress. Those that do react still don’t get sick from it.

“Chronic stress occurs in nature, but animals respond to it in an adaptive manner shaped by intense evolutionary selection,” says Boonstra, a professor of biology at 91Թ Scarborough.

Boonstra argues in a new article in Functional Ecology that wildlife biologists are too influenced by the medical literature on humans, and need to look more closely at the effects of stress on animals in the wild.

For instance, snowshoe hares at times face so many predators that the vast majority are eventually killed. But the hares don’t get sick, they continue to breed, and their stress response continues to function appropriately, Boonstra says.

Numerous studies in humans have shown chronic stress can damage the immune, cardiovascular, neuroendocrine and central nervous systems. In the lab, rats and mice can also suffer ill effects from chronic stress, for instance when they are exposed to the constant sight or scent of a predator.

But lab animals are inbred and raised in artificial conditions, Boonstra says. Even the stressors they face are artificial. In the wild no rat is likely to be exposed to the sight of a cat for days on end without the ability to run or hide.

Boonstra looked instead at evidence from wild animal populations, and found that some animals show no signs at all of chronic stress when exposed to long-term high risk situations. For instance, after wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park in 1995 and 1996, life for the elk there became much more dangerous. But the elk showed no signs of elevated stress hormones, or effects like increased sickness or lower birth rates.

Snowshoe hares, on the other hand, did show hormonal changes when predator levels increased. But there’s no evidence that the changes were pathological. The hares had more stress hormones circulating in their systems, but their stress response was not blunted as it is in chronically stressed humans – they could still respond appropriately to acute dangers.

The size of the hares’ litters did fall. But Boonstra argues that the change was actually adaptive. Having smaller litters required fewer resources of the mother, and made it more likely that she and her offspring would survive the current dangerous conditions.

Boonstra thinks that ecologists and physiologists working on wild animals should realize that medical findings about stress in humans and lab animals don’t apply to wild animals.

“You and I are very different creatures relative any other wild vertebrate such as elk, squirrels or snowshoe hares. We mull things over. We know the future and think about the past, often continually. We know we're going to die. Animals don't think like we do,” he says.

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