Skin temperature reveals the intensity of acute stress

Restraint, Physical Thermal imaging Photoperiod Posture 05 social sciences Video Recording Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Eye Handling, Psychological Article Stress-induced hyperthermia Behavioral Neuroscience Animal welfare Thermography Face Acute Disease Comb and Wattles Animals Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Corticosterone Skin Temperature Chickens Stress, Psychological
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2015.09.032 Publication Date: 2015-10-09T09:27:08Z
ABSTRACT
Acute stress triggers peripheral vasoconstriction, causing a rapid, short-term drop in skin temperature in homeotherms. We tested, for the first time, whether this response has the potential to quantify stress, by exhibiting proportionality with stressor intensity. We used established behavioural and hormonal markers: activity level and corticosterone level, to validate a mild and more severe form of an acute restraint stressor in hens (Gallus gallus domesticus). We then used infrared thermography (IRT) to non-invasively collect continuous temperature measurements following exposure to these two intensities of acute handling stress. In the comb and wattle, two skin regions with a known thermoregulatory role, stressor intensity predicted the extent of initial skin cooling, and also the occurrence of a more delayed skin warming, providing two opportunities to quantify stress. With the present, cost-effective availability of IRT technology, this non-invasive and continuous method of stress assessment in unrestrained animals has the potential to become common practice in pure and applied research.
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