Category Archives: Physiology

Pascoe to explore male physiology in second Faber book | The … – The Bookseller

Published July 25, 2017 by Natasha Onwuemezi

Faber is to publish Sex Power Money, the follow up to comedian Sara Pascoe's feminist exploration of the female body Animal....

Faber is to publish Sex Power Money, the follow up to comedian Sara Pascoe's feminist exploration of the female body Animal.

Laura Hassan, editorial director at Faber & Faber, acquired world all language and audio rights to the title from Dawn Sedgwick at Dawn Sedgwick Management. Faber will publish Pascoes second book in August 2018.

In Sex Power Money, Pascoe once again looks to evolution to explain why modern humans are "struggling to be better". The book will be part comedy, part anthropological investigation of the human condition with a focus on male physiology, psychology and hormones. Pascoe will ask questions about masculinity, the contradictory messages bombarding men and how maleness is constructed by our culture. "Much like Pascoes Animal: The Autobiography of a Female Body, this book will be funny, enlightening and open-minded all at the same time", the publisher said.

Pascoe said that during research for Animal, she kept finding that many of the issues affecting human beings were split "not along gender lines but financial".

"There is a direct correlation between vulnerability and poverty and I wanted to explore issues such as sex work and domestic violence not only as purely feminist issues. I also wanted to balance my exploration of the female body with my new fascination for the male - which is equally mysterious, surprising, and occasionally shocking. Our prehistoric ape behaviours have to be at the front of our minds if we want to improve as a species: we have to understand where we came from."

Hassan praised Pascoe's "generous spirit of investigation" in both her book and comedy writing. "She takes on the big knotty stuff of life and makes sense of it all," Hassan said. "This will be an essential and enlightening read."

Pascoe is a comedian, actor and writer. She has appeared on "Live At The Apollo", "Have I Got News For You?" and "The Thick Of It". She is also a columnist for the Guardian and has adapted Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen for the Nottingham Playhouse and York Theatre Royal.

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Pascoe to explore male physiology in second Faber book | The ... - The Bookseller

Fit For You: Men vs. Women in Endurance Sports – WUWM

Lake Effect's Audrey Nowakowski with Dr. Sandra Hunter of Marquette University's Exercise Science Program.

The battle of the sexes has been long documented - especially in sports. Women have made tremendous strides in both novice and professional competitions, but the question of attaining a truly even playing field remains uncertain.

When it comes to sports performance, things are not equal. Men are generally stronger and faster than women thanks to their physiology. However there have been claims made over the years that the longer an event goes -- think ultra-marathon or even longer -- the more advantages women have over men.

Women have broken through to either win or set records in major endurance competitions such as ultramarathons, World's Toughest Mudder, and the Trans Am. But are these victories exceptions rather than the rule? Dr. Sandra Hunter of Marquette University's Exercise Science Program has been studying the sex differences in sports for more more than two decades - long enough to compile a great deal of data.

She states that overall, in most sports that require power or some type on endurance, the best men will always outperform the best women. There is overlap where a lot of women can perform better than men, says Hunter, but "in terms of endurance, the maximal oxygen consumption - that capacity for men is better due to larger hearts, bigger muscle mass, more hemoglobin, and less body fat to carry."

If women aren't competing at the same rates and the participation is less, we really won't and don't understand the true physiological sex differences and what's relevant for women.

Hunter notes that there is about a 10-12% difference in world records between men and women across the board. "That's just the bottom line, and it's always going to make it difficult for women to outdo men."

Her researchshows that while men may succeed more in endurance sports, women are less fatigue-able than men if you get them to perform a very particular exercise at the same intensity as a man. Women's arms and lower limb muscles consistently outperform men's due to the different makeup of muscle fibers. "Women on average have more fatigue resistant muscle fibers then men," says Hunter.

There are two approaches to understanding the sex difference, according to Hunter: one is to bring men and women into the research laboratory to research physiology, and the other approach is to take real-world performance data and try to understand physiology based on that data.

The latter method of research is not as accurate because the records of women's performances in sporting events have not been compiled as long as men's. Hunter notes that women could not officially compete in marathons until the 1970s, therefore the amount of records compiled is clearly not equal.

"The reality is you get less women and less men competing in those [endurance] events, so you get more of these anomalies that occur," notes Hunter.

She also states that women are not studied or included in research as often as men. This not only has big implications for sports research, but for medical research as well. Hunter says that some male researchers she has met express their reluctance to study women because they are uncomfortable in dealing with menstrual cycles. She says the menstrual cycle in fact has very little impact on a woman's performance.

"The differences across the menstrual cycle for a woman...are much less than the differences between men and women," Hunter explains. "They're just small fluctuations and they really have very limited effect on some of the more pertinent issues of strength and fatigue-ability. So I think it's more perception and that we just have got to start including women more than men in a lot of these studies."

Another claim Hunter has proven wrong is the notion that men are more competitive than women. "We do studies in my lab where we actually measure the ability of the brain to activate the muscle, and there's zip differences between men in women. That in fact women are equally motivated to perform maximal contractions just as much as men are," says Hunter. She notes that women try just as hard as men, but women also historically have had fewer opportunities to participate in exercise and some sports events such as the marathon. Hunter adds that women in general tend to participate less in exercise than men, although it's not clear why. It could be attributed to the myriad of other responsibilities and priorities that men may not share in their daily lives.

It's not like women are less than men or men are less than women. I talk about this not because I think women are more important, but because they're just as important.

Just as motivation doesn't differ between the sexes, nor does the age at which men and women peak in performance. According to Hunter, the average age of peak performance is 29 for both men and women. She came upon this discovery after a Runners World journalist asked her about age and performance after the 2008 Beijing Olympics - the woman who won the marathon was 38 years old while the man was only 21 years old.

Hunter says the real issue is not about definitively proving which sex is "better" through physiological tests. The bottom line is "if women aren't competing at the same rates and the participation is less, we really won't and don't understand the true physiological sex differences and what's relevant for women."

Only time will tell whether the sex difference can be measured appropriately once men and women are equally incorporated in competitive sports. "Then we'll really see what those differences are," says Hunter. "And those differences should be celebrated. It's not like women are less than men or men are less than women. I talk about this not because I think women are more important, but because they're just as important. And I think that is a really key thing to remember."

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Fit For You: Men vs. Women in Endurance Sports - WUWM

WWU students find octopus study a garden of delights – Walla Walla Union-Bulletin

Id like to be under the sea

In an octopus garden in the shade

Hed let us in, knows where weve been

In his octopus garden in the shade

Ringo Starr, 1969, Octopuss Garden

Its all about octopuses this summer in Walla Walla University assistant professor of biology Kirt Onthanks lab. The images to the right are screen shots from his Octopodium YouTube Channel.

Anyone can follow along with Kirt and his students during the current session at the WWU Marine Biology Station at Rosario Beach in Anacortes, Wash. Subscribe to Octopodium at ubne.ws/2tIyi0Y,which has collections of videos from several seasons.

Kirts bio on the WWU website notes hes particularly interested in ecological physiology and behavioral ecology of marine invertebrates, especially cephalopods (squid, octopus and nautilus fall in this molluscan class).

All living things must bring to bear specific physiological adaptations to survive and thrive in the environments in which they find themselves. I am particularly interested how cephalopods physiology, which is similar to that of slugs, snails and clams, has enabled this group of marine invertebrates to be active, mobile predators that compete with vertebrates. I am also interested in adaptations, behavioral and physiological to dynamic, changing environments, such as hydrothermal vents, he said in his bio.

Etcetera appears in daily and Sunday editions. Annie Charnley Eveland can be reached at annieeveland@wwub.com or afternoons at 526-8313.

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WWU students find octopus study a garden of delights - Walla Walla Union-Bulletin

Smart textiles to assess pilot physiology – TEVO – Textile Evolution (subscription)

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KSU professor to receive award from American Physiological Society – Manhattan Mercury (subscription)

Tim Musch, university distinguished professor of kinesiology, and anatomy and physiology, was selected for the 2018 Honor Award from Environmental and Exercise Physiology, or EEP, section of the American Physiologic Society.

This award reflects Muschs stature in the field and his contributions to the EEP section. The Honor Award recognizes a previous or current primary member of the EEP section who is 60 years of age or older and has made significant research contributions to the scientific advancement of environmental, exercise, thermal or applied physiology while making significant contributions to enhancing the objectives of the section.

Musch received his bachelors and masters degrees in physical education from the University of California, Berkeley in 1972 and 1974, respectively. He received his doctorate in exercise physiology from the University of Wisconsin, Madison in 1981, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship in cardiovascular research from Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, Texas, in 1984.

Today, Musch teaches exercise physiology on the Manhattan campus and is the co-director of the Cardiorespiratory Exercise Research Laboratory.

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KSU professor to receive award from American Physiological Society - Manhattan Mercury (subscription)

Spring 2017 Commencement at College of St. Scholastica – Brainerd Dispatch

Jessica Murphy of Wadena. Murphy graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts in Accounting.

Kelsey Box of Deer River. Box graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts in English.

Chloe Wolske of Boy River. Wolske graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Management.

Jace Swanson of Deer River. Swanson graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts in Marketing.

Maurice Bakkila of Brainerd. Bakkila graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Organizational Behavior.

Travis Gleason of Baxter. Gleason graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Organizational Behavior.

Kayla Adkins of Pequot Lakes. Adkins graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology.

Anne Hofius of Brainerd. Hofius graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology.

Connie Moose of Brainerd. Moose graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts in Social Work.

Jacob Blong of Brainerd. Blong graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Physiology.

Gerrit Garberich of Brainerd. Garberich graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Physiology.

Sierra Hanowski of Swanville. Hanowski graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Physiology.

Kacy Livingston of Pequot Lakes. Livingston graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Physiology.

August Marleau of Deer River. Marleau graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Physiology.

Alyssa Anderson of Brainerd. Anderson graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Health Information Management.

Emily Jansen of Long Prairie. Jansen graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Health Information Management.

Laura Bandow of Isle. Bandow graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Sarah Becker of Long Prairie. Becker graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Adam Hiltner of Brainerd. Hiltner graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Jennifer Hortness of Little Falls. Hortness graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Joshua Klous of Pierz. Klous graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Mary Kraemer of Baxter. Kraemer graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Isabel Lawrence of Pine River. Lawrence graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Magan McCusker of Deerwood. McCusker graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Emily Orthman of Royalton. Orthman graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Rafael Pichardo of Wadena. Pichardo graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Karissa Posterick of Brainerd. Posterick graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Alyssa Stangler of Albany. Stangler graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Joshua Trosen of Hackensack. Trosen graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing.

Joan Kotila of Pierz. Kotila graduated with a Doctor of Nursing Practice in Advanced Practice Nursing.

Denise Lund of Baxter. Lund graduated with a Doctor of Nursing Practice in Advanced Practice Nursing.

Lisa Smeby of Swanville. Smeby graduated with a Doctor of Nursing Practice in Advanced Practice Nursing.

Carri Jones of Cass Lake. Jones graduated with a Master of Business Admin. in Business Administration.

Victoria Sechser of Pine River. Sechser graduated with a Master of Science in Athletic Training.

Thomas Nixon of Deerwood. Nixon graduated with a Master of Science in Project Management.

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Spring 2017 Commencement at College of St. Scholastica - Brainerd Dispatch

How your risk of heart disease stems back to your time in the womb – Medical Xpress

July 11, 2017 Credit: Ryan Melaugh

Smoking, lack of exercise, bad diet and our genes are all well-known risk factors for heart disease, cancer and diabetes. But, as researchers are beginning to understand, the environment in the womb as we first begin to grow may also determine our future.

The history of science is littered with self-experimenters so passionate about their work that they used themselves as human guinea pigs, however ill-advisedly.

Sir Joseph Barcroft (18721947) was one such character. Professor of Physiology at Cambridge, he was best known for his studies of the oxygenation of blood. He also led mountain expeditions where he analysed the oxygen content of his blood and that of other expedition members.

In the middle of his career, Barcroft built an airtight glass chamber in his laboratory in Cambridge. There, he could live and exercise at oxygen levels equivalent to 16,000 feet. Like many self-experimentation stories, things did not always go to plan: in one experiment, he had to be rescued by colleagues after spending six days in the chamber and reportedly turning blue.

Despite his occasional misguided venture, Barcroft's scientific legacy was significant and so, in his honour, the University of Cambridge has recently opened a new state-of-the-art facility in his name. Research at the Barcroft Centre focuses on farm animals mainly sheep and chickens, but also pigs to model important aspects of human physiology.

The Centre's work spans several areas including Professor Jenny Morton's studies on understanding fatal neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's disease and a similar childhood disease, Batten disease, and Dr Frances Henson's work on bone diseases such as osteoarthritis.

However, a significant amount of its work focuses on how we develop in the womb and how this programmes us for increased risk of heart disease in later life. This seems fitting as, in later years, Barcroft became interested in fetal development, and in particular the effects of low levels of oxygen on the unborn baby in the womb.

Carrying on this legacy are Professor Dino Giussani and his postdocs Dr Kim Botting and Dr Youguo Niu. All are also members of the Centre for Trophoblast Research (CTR), which this year celebrates its tenth anniversary and focuses on the interactions between the pregnant mother and the fetus, as mediated by the placenta.

Low levels of oxygen or hypoxia can occur in high-altitude pregnancies. But, as Giussani explains, there are far more common causes. "Smoking, pre-eclampsia, even maternal obesity these all increase the risk of hypoxia for the mother's baby, as do inherited genetic variants," he says.

Housed in the Barcroft Centre is a suite of hypoxia chambers superficially similar, perhaps, to that in which Barcroft placed himself, but nowadays far more sophisticated (and much safer). These are not intended for humans, but rather for animals, each of which is very closely monitored, often remotely using technology developed by the team.

The smallest of these chambers doubles as an incubator for fertilised hens' eggs. Scientists can watch the development of the fetus directly. They can see how the heart grows, for example, how it is affected by hypoxia, and what effect potential drugs have in ameliorating possible complications.

Of course, we grow in a womb, with a placenta connecting us to our mother and controlling our nutritional intake. Mice and rats are the most commonly used mammals in research, but to model mammalian development in longer-living species with similar rates of development to humans, it is necessary to turn to larger animals. Sheep make a good model. Not only is their gestation and postnatal life more comparable to a human's than to a rat's, but a newborn lamb's physiology is also similar in a crucial way to a newborn baby's: its heart is mature at birth. By comparison, a newborn rat's heart is still very immature.

For part of gestation, the sheep are placed in hypoxia chambers, which contain finely controlled, lower-than-normal levels of oxygen. "This reduces the amount of oxygen in the blood of the pregnant sheep and thereby in her fetus," explains Botting. "This mimics conditions where the placenta is not working appropriately, as in pregnancy complicated by pre-eclampsia or maternal obesity."

The pregnant ewes deliver outside the chambers in normal ambient air. Once born, most of the lambs are put out to pasture in the paddocks adjacent to the Centre, where they grow to adulthood.

"The lambs which were hypoxic in the womb are not noticeably different," says Giussani. "The sheep will effectively live a normal life. That is the very point, because underneath, a silent killer is brewing; we want to investigate what happens as they grow because there is a theory that a complicated pregnancy may increase the risk of heart disease in the offspring later in life."

Professor Abby Fowden, Head of the School of the Biological Sciences, and another CTR member and user of the Barcroft Centre, says that the facilities are unique. "It's probably the only centre in the UK that has the capacity the surgical and care facilities to do these kinds of long-term developmental and neurodegenerative studies," she explains.

Like Giussani, Fowden and her collaborator Dr Alison Forhead are interested in how the early environment in the womb programmes us for disease in later life. They are particularly interested in the role of hormones in both the mother and the fetus and how they affect growth and development.

There are some conditions, such as hypothyroidism whereby the body produces insufficient thyroid hormones and maternal stress, that probably affect normal fetal development, but about which surprisingly little is understood. To model these conditions, Fowden and Forhead again turn to a range of mammals including sheep and pigs.

As Forhead explains, normal development of the fetus is crucial for health in later life. "In the case of many organs, you're born with a certain number of functional units, and in postnatal life you don't have the capacity to change that number. So the number you're born with has long-lasting consequences."

Take nephrons, for example. These are functional units of our kidneys that filter the blood and are responsible for how much salt and water is excreted into the urine. "If you're born with fewer nephrons, this has consequences for how much salt you retain, setting you up in later life to be at greater risk of developing high blood pressure."

What is apparent from this work is just how much of disease in later life is programmed in the womb. While our lifestyle our diet, how much we exercise after birth plays an important role in whether we develop heart disease or type 2 diabetes, for example, much of the risk is present before we are even born, programmed during pregnancy into how our DNA and tissues function.

And these effects don't necessarily stop at the next generation, as Giussani is discovering in his parallel work with rodents, which allows two or more generations to be studied in a comparably short time.

"If we look at the 'grandchildren' of pregnant rats that had a hypoxic pregnancy, we see this disease risk being passed on again, but in a really interesting way," he says. "A male 'child' passes on the cardiovascular risk to the 'grandchild', but female offspring confer protection. This is really exciting as inheritable protection against a future risk of heart disease has never been demonstrated in mammals."

In other words, while we must still recognise our own contribution to our risk of developing certain diseases, some of this risk was programmed into us before we were born: in fact, even before our parents were born. Work at the Barcroft Centre in monitoring animals for not just one generation but several will be vital for understanding the consequences of pregnancy not only for our children but also for their children and even their children's children.

Explore further: Study suggests that aging begins in the womb

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How your risk of heart disease stems back to your time in the womb - Medical Xpress

Clover Connection: Extension research center celebrating 50 years – Athens Daily Review

In addition to having county extension offices that serve the citizens of Texas, AgriLife Extension also has 12 Research and Extension Centers. The center that serves us here in Henderson County is located in Overton. It will be celebrating its 50th birthday on Wednesday, July 12.

For half a century, Texas A&M AgriLife Research has conducted trials and developed new innovations to help East Texas and Texas producers optimize their operations and to provide quality goods, including flowers, fruits and vegetables, and beef to consumers.

Overton center staff will welcome public, state and area officials and Texas A&M University System officials to the facility at 1:15 p.m., July 12, for presentations on its history and contributions to Texans.

Presentations by staff will be followed by a keynote address from John Sharp, Texas A&M System chancellor, and comments by Dr. Craig Nessler, AgriLife Research director, Dr. Doug Steele, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service director, and Dr. Mark Hussey, vice chancellor and dean for College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Texas A&M University, all from College Station. A reception will follow the ceremony.

Nessler said the 50-year milestone for the Overton center, and the future of AgriLife Research around the state should be celebrated by all Texans.

AgriLife Research scientists in Overton have made amazing contributions to the daily lives of Texans in the past 50 years, he said. Much of what we do as researchers is done behind the scenes, and without a desire for attention and accolades. But if you enjoy ornamental flowers or great lawn turf, produce or consume beef, or grow fruits and vegetables, theres a good chance youve benefited from AgriLife Research efforts in Overton.

AgriLife Research at the Overton center focuses on the problems and potential successes for residents and producers in East Texas, Long said. Developing new technology and techniques for producers and consumers is the mission of AgriLife Researchs statewide system.

Scientists at the center cover a wide range of disciplines, including horticulture, soil and crop science, animal science and related fields. The research trials performed by scientists at the center are provided to producers and consumers through coordinated efforts with AgriLife Extension specialists, and agents around the state who represent the educational arm of the system.

Dr. Charles Long, the centers director for the past 35 years, said research conducted at the center has made lasting impacts for Texas farmers and ranchers, various agricultural industries, the states economy and the residents who enjoy the end product.

Research activities at the center fit the highest regional agricultural priority, as available financial, facility and personnel resources allow, Long said.

The plan is to conduct research in areas of the highest need, while ensuring programs are sufficiently supported to provide a reasonably high probability of success, Long said.

Scientists at the Overton center conduct research in five disciplines soil science, pasture utilization, forage plant breeding, animal physiology and horticulture.

Over the past 50 years, AgriLife Researchers have developed and conducted trials on thousands of varieties of ornamental flowers, fruits and vegetables, and forages.

For example, Dr. Lloyd Nelson, AgriLife Research small grains breeder, developed Panterra and Axcella 2, turf-type annual ryegrasses bred specifically for winter overseeding of warm-season grasses on athletic fields and home lawns. The varieties have been used in the Olympics and World Cup and on Professional Golfers Association courses.

Nelson also developed forages. He is responsible for TAM 90, a ryegrass that combined cold and rust tolerance from other popular ryegrass varieties to create the winter forage. Since its creation in 1990, 85 million pounds of TAM 90 have been sold, enough to overseed 2.8 million acres.

Scientists also conduct research to identify physiological and temperamental traits in beef cattle that can optimize production for producers.

Dr. Ron Randel, an internationally known AgriLife Research physiologist, oversees several projects at the center focused on the reproductive physiology of tropically adapted cattle, the nutrition-reproduction interaction and most recently the temperament and stress responsiveness of beef cattle. He has researched the physiology and endocrinology of ovarian and pituitary functions in Brahman cattle for more than four decades.

Those two scientists are just a couple of examples of what AgriLife Research has been doing over the past five decades, Long said. There are success stories after success stories that continue to impact the lives of people all over the world, and they were written right here in Overton.

Kate Pittack is the Henderson County Extension Agent 4-H & Youth Development for Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service. Contact her at: kate.pittack@ag.tamu.edu & visit our webpage at http://henderson.agrilife.org

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Clover Connection: Extension research center celebrating 50 years - Athens Daily Review

India lags in clinical research field: Dr Mishra – Times of India

Nagpur: Even as the health care system has seen rapid advancements over the years, the country has witnessed minuscule progress in the field of research in physiology. This is evident from the fact that in the year 2014-15, total 43,689 publications came out from all 421 medical colleges of the country, including eight premier institutions. The contribution of the department of physiology was, however, just 0.82%.

Revealing these figures, chancellor of Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences Deemed University, Dr Ved Prakash Mishra, rued the fact that the field of physiology hasn't grown much in the country.

Mishra also talked about the poor research work being carried out in private clinics. "If we talk about our country's private clinical set-ups, the conversion of their clinical work into research material is mere 4.2%, while in a small country like Poland their utilization is 92%. In the US, their utilization rate is 72%, while even China manages it to an extent of 52%."

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India lags in clinical research field: Dr Mishra - Times of India

Stress testhow scientists can measure how animals are feeling – Phys.Org

July 10, 2017 Credit: University of Western Sydney

To help determine how stress is affecting animals across Australia, researchers at Western Sydney University are utilising non-invasive methods to help farmers, zookeepers and pet owners ensure their animals are happy and healthy.

Stress is an important biological response for animals as it helps their bodies prepare to fight or flee from danger. But many animals in the modern world are forced to coexist with humans in farms, zoos or homes, and the onset of chronic stress can have devastating results, both for them and their owners.

"Stress can affect the weight of farm animals, leading to losses for animal producers, and can disrupt the breeding patterns of endangered animals in captivity," says Dr Edward Narayan, Senior Lecturer in Animal Science, from the School of Science and Health.

"Here at Western Sydney University we are working with clients to collect animal scats under routine husbandry and run them through our laboratories to measure stress levels."

When a stress result is sparked in an animal, the brain-body starts to release biomolecules such as cortisol, which is the main stress hormone in large animals such as humans, elephants and sheep. Ultimately, this cortisol is broken up by the kidneys, and ends up in excreta.

"By testing these scats, we can monitor and track animals from a distance and gain a snapshot and new understanding of their mood and health," says Dr Narayan.

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This research comes under the umbrella of conservation physiology, a rapidly expanding field of study that measures the physiological responses of organisms subject to human interference. While the traditional field of conservation biology seeks to manage the natural environment to help protect threatened species, conservation physiology is a way to improve the health and happiness of animals in contact with humans.

For animals, a life with minimal stress is linked to happiness, as high stress reflects fear and anxiety. In most cases, happiness for animals revolves around the daily needs for survival, such as securing food and shelter. By reducing stress among animals, scientists can help them redirect energy often used for survival to other uses, such as increasing fat reserves and reproduction.

"Considering human activity has pushed the world to the sixth mass extinction event, measuring the stress levels of native animals may help conserve their dwindling numbers by providing real-time data on species' physiological resilience and vulnerabilities towards anthropogenic induced environmental changes. By having access to this data, researchers are able to help direct conservation and management efforts towards at-risk species," says Dr Narayan.

The potential applications are vast, as the studies can be replicated across species living in different settings, from koalas in nature parks, to sheep in pasture, and even domestic animals in apartments. It also enables researchers to monitor population health during management interventions, such as species translocation and invasive pest species eradication programs.

"At the moment, we're working with sheep farmers in regional Australia to help monitor the physiological markers of their animals, with the ultimate aim of tracking their mood. By ensuring the sheep are stress free, we can improve their productivity in terms of meat quality and reproduction. In addition, we're also working with international animal rescue programs such as Animals Asia to provide crucial data on the stress physiology of Asiatic black bears being rescued from bile farms in Vietnam."

In addition to analysing scats, Dr Narayan and researchers at Western Sydney University also examine other samples, such as hairs and urine. The researchers are planning to utilise drone technology to help farmers in remote locations track their animals as they are moved across vast distances. The tests can even be ordered by domestic animal owners looking to track the stress responses of their pets.

"Cats and dogs are very prevalent in Australia, and are obviously affected by human behaviour. For example, a dog may be stressed if it's not provided with tender loving care, or a cat may be upset if it's not able to access a warm space in winter. What the non-invasive tests can measure is their stress responses over time, giving us baseline indicators of their mood and allowing us to intervene if necessary by pinpointing the moments of great stress in their lives, and working backwards to discover the cause."

Explore further: Shearing of alpacas is necessary, but also stressful

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Small groups of meerkatssuch as those commonly seen in zoos and safari parksare at greater risk of chronic stress, new research suggests.

Identifying stress hormones in insects can be a step towards environmentally friendly pesticides. Researchers from Stockholm University have discovered that one hormone coordinates the responses to stress in fruit flies. ...

Although studies suggest that inhaling certain scents may reduce stress in humans, aromatherapy is relatively unexplored in veterinary medicine. But new research presented today at the American Physiological Society (APS) ...

In a study published recently in the journal Physiology & Behavior an international team of researchers examined whether cats living in multi-cat households are more stressed than cats housed singly. Many media outlets responded ...

Aquaculture experts from the University of Stirling and the Institute for Food and Agricultural Research and Technology (IRTA) in Catalonia, have found the way fish, Senegalese sole, cope with stress is determined by their ...

Bonobos have a reputation for being the peaceful, free-loving hippies of the primate world. But, researchers reporting in Current Biology on July 10 have discovered that despite friendly relations between the sexes, particular ...

To keep blood and oxygen flowing throughout their bodies, most animals depend on a beating heart. But researchers reporting in Current Biology on July 10 have discovered that sea spiders use a strange alternative: they move ...

When Jeremy Goldbogen, an assistant professor of biology at Stanford University, affixed recording devices to humpback whales, it was with the hope of learning more about how the animals move in their natural environment ...

When does a (typically) vegetarian caterpillar become a cannibalistic caterpillar, even when there is still plenty of plant left to eat?

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Birds such as parrots and crows have been using touchscreen technology as part of an international research study examining whether the ways in which animals respond to new things influences how eager they are to explore.

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Stress testhow scientists can measure how animals are feeling - Phys.Org