Male endocrine responses to females: Effects of social cues in cynomolgus macaques
โ Scribed by Barbara Beckerman Glick
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 748 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0275-2565
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This study tested the hypothesis that the hormonal responses of male macaques to sexually receptive females are mediated by specific socioenvironmental cues. Twelve, socially living male Macaca fascicularis were exposed to two-ovariectomized, estrogen-primed females under pair test, peer group, and peer group without dominant male conditions. Preexposure to postexposure changes in serum cortisol levels and testosterone levels were examined in relation to male dominance rank, age, and conditions of access to stimulus females. The males displayed significantly lower cortisol increases and greater testosterone increases with females under peer group than pair test conditions. Dominant males displayed greater testosterone increases than subordinate males under peer group conditions. The testosterone levels of subordinate males were greatly enhanced by removing the dominant male from each group. Adult males displayed greater cortisol responsivity to changes in conditions of access to females than did subadult males. Subadult males displayed greater testosterone responsivity to removal of the dominant male from the group than did adult males. It is concluded that specific social cues can greatly influence the endocrine responses of males to receptive females, and further, that there may be optimal socioenvironmental parameters for eliciting testosterone increases in male primates.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
When rhesus monkeys are observed in social groups during the breeding season, increases in interfemale aggression coincide with midcycle increases in sexual activity between males and females. However, some investigators have suggested that both aggressive and affiliative interactions between female
The effects of long-term chronic stress during prepubertal periods of growth and development on an organism's ability to release ACTH during future episodes of an acute novel stress and in response to exogenous CRH were examined. Following a 6-week stress period, in which prepubertal male and female
## Abstract Accurate song perception is likely to be as important for female songbirds as it is for male songbirds. Male zebra finches (__Taeniopygia guttata)__ show differential ZENK expression to conspecific and heterospecific songs by day 30 posthatch in auditory perceptual brain regions such as