Remote welfare assessment in wildlife using stand-off Raman spectroscopy

Grantees: Jose Gonzalez-Rodriguez and Teresa Romero

 

Institution: University of Lincoln, UK

Grant amount: $55,519

 

Grant type: Discovery grants

Focal species: Tufted capuchin monkeys (Sapajus apella)

 

Conservation status: Least concern

Disciplines: Physiology, animal behavior

 

Research locations: United Kingdom, United States


Project summary

To enhance the welfare of wild animals, it is crucial to continuously monitor biomarkers and other metrics that can indicate changes in their welfare. However, this presents the challenge of obtaining repeated measurements from individuals, which often involves capture, restraint, and/or handling — procedures that can have significant negative welfare impacts on free-living wild animals. This project aims to develop a stand-off Raman spectroscopy system as a non-invasive tool to assess hormonal levels in wild animals, which can be integrated into welfare assessments. The project also aims to validate under standardized and natural conditions how biomarkers of long-term stress relate to a range of stressors that may affect wild animal welfare. They will use a combination of socio-positive (e.g., play, grooming) and negative (e.g., aggression, screaming) behaviors, indices of social integration, behavioral indicators of anxiety (i.e., self-directed behaviors), and resting behavior, as well as physical indicators of welfare (body condition, instances of injury). 

Why we funded this project

This project builds on a previous WAI-funded project, which validated the use of Raman spectroscopy as an efficient way of testing hormones in hair. It will test whether this method can be used to measure hair cortisol levels from a distance, potentially helping to make the use of this indicator more scalable for long-term monitoring in the field, and reducing the need for distressing or invasive methods for welfare assessment. 


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Validating welfare indicators in an arachnid and their relationship to leg loss, a common defense strategy

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Assessing the Impact of Ectoparasites on Nestling Welfare: Validating Behavioral and Physiological Indicators in Darwin’s Finches