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Seasonal variations in hair pigmentation of white-tailed deer and their relationship to sexual activity and plasma testosterone

✍ Scribed by Bubenik, G. A. ;Bubenik, A. B.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1985
Tongue
English
Weight
714 KB
Volume
235
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-104X

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✦ Synopsis


Intensity of hair pigmentation of dorsal scrotum, nose, cheek and forehead areas of seven mature, male white-tailed deer were determined from close-up colour slides taken once a month during a 2-year period. Blood samples and skin biopsies from forehead areas were taken at the same time as the photographs. Plasma testosterone (T) levels were measured by radioimmunoassay and T in the skin was investigated by immunohistology. Seasonal variations of hair pigmentation are most pronounced in the forehead region followed by the cheek, scrotum, and nose area. Peak blood levels of T (15.4 ng/ ml) were detected in November. The highest correlation between T levels and pigmentation of the forehead area (R = 93%; R2 = 0.87), was established when pigmentation values were shifted two months ahead. Immunohistologically detectable T was localized in hair follicles, hair sheets and apocrine glands but not in the sebaceous glands. It is hypothesized that pigmentation of head regions might serve as a visual cue indicating the sexual status of an individual.

In males of many mammalian species, the intensity of scrotal pigmentation was found to be closely correlated with the testicular activity (Finkel, '45). It has been established