Endocrine responsiveness to social challenges in northern and southern hemisphere populations of Zonotrichia
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Wingfield, John C.
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Endocrine responsiveness to social challenges in northern and southern hemisphere populations of Zonotrichia
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Abstract
Northern populations of the White-crowned
Sparrow, Zonotrichia leucophrys, show varying degrees of
social modulation of testosterone. In general, males of midlatitude
breeding and multiple-brooded populations show
transient increases in secretions of luteinizing hormone and
testosterone when challenged by another male for a territory,
or when exposed to sexually receptive females. These
surges of testosterone do not appear to activate aggression
associated with territory defense or mate-guarding, but
appear to enhance persistence of aggression during and
after the behavioral interaction. Males may continue to sing
spontaneously and patrol the territory for many hours even
after the behavioral interaction is over. However, males of high latitude and altitude populations do not socially
modulate testosterone levels. Several hypotheses, not necessarily
mutually exclusive, have been proposed to explain
why males in some populations do socially modulate testosterone
and others do not. Males will not socially
modulate testosterone if: (1) the breeding season is so
restricted in time (e.g., high latitude and altitude) there are
few social interactions; (2) populations in which males are
essential for parental care; and (3) populations in which
extra-pair copulations are low and male-male interactions
are minimal. Tropical populations of the Rufous-collared
Sparrow, Z. capensis costaricensis, have extended breeding
seasons and they are multiple-brooded, but do not socially
modulate testosterone. This is unlike Z. leucophrys. Whether
austral populations of the Rufous-collared Sparrow
socially modulate testosterone under presumably similar
constraints of mid- to high-latitude seasonality are currently
under investigation.
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Much of the research cited in this review was
supported by grant numbers OPP-9911333 and IBN-0317141 from
the National Science Foundation to J.C. Wingfield. All research
conducted by the senior author on these grants was approved by the
University of Washington Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
R.A.V. acknowledges support from IEB-grant P05-002-ICM.
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J Ornithol (2007) 148 (Suppl 2):S435–S441
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