Literature DB >> 16087184

Resource defense and juvenile hormone: the "challenge hypothesis" extended to insects.

Michelle Pellissier Scott1.   

Abstract

As predicted for vertebrates by the challenge hypothesis, the endocrine system of invertebrates can respond to social stimuli to modulate aggression. Testosterone (T) is generally considered to moderate aggression associated with reproduction, i.e. the establishment of breeding territories, mate guarding and offspring defense; juvenile hormone (JH) serves an analogous function in burying beetles. Hemolymph titers of JH increase significantly in Nicrophorus orbicollis, a species with facultative biparental care, when challenged by an intruder to defend their resource. During the first 12 h after the discovery of a carcass, the necessary breeding resource, competition is intrasexual, and JH of males responds only to a challenge by males, and JH of females responds only to a challenge by female intruders. After this period, competition is intersexual, and JH increases significantly in both males and females challenged by an intruder of either sex. In contrast, JH titers in a nonparental species are much higher throughout the breeding season, and neither males nor females respond hormonally to an intruder. These findings support the challenge hypothesis and suggest that mating systems and breeding strategies can promote plastic responses in insect, as well as vertebrate, endocrine systems.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16087184     DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2005.07.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Behav        ISSN: 0018-506X            Impact factor:   3.587


  7 in total

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Authors:  Gonçalo A Oliveira; Sara Uceda; Tânia Oliveira; Alexandre Fernandes; Teresa Garcia-Marques; Rui F Oliveira
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Review 7.  Integrating resource defence theory with a neural nonapeptide pathway to explain territory-based mating systems.

Authors:  Ronald G Oldfield; Rayna M Harris; Hans A Hofmann
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  7 in total

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