Literature DB >> 19337720

Testosterone: from initiating change to modulating social organisation in domestic fowl (Gallus gallus domesticus).

John P Kent1, Kenneth J Murphy, Finian J Bannon, Niamh M Hynes, Thomas J Hayden.   

Abstract

Testosterone (T) concentrations in many species are sensitive to seasonal changes and to changes in social conditions. However, the effect of the natural or endogenous T increase in the juvenile on their social behaviour is not well understood. In this study, T and behaviour were measured from the pro-social juvenile to the adult stage in semi-feral domestic fowl. During the pro-social phase T levels and the distance chicks maintained between each other, i.e. inter-individual distance (IID) were low. Then, as T increased, a corresponding increase in IID occurred and continued in males until dispersal to individual adult male territories. In the new and initially stable adult social structure, T declined and IID remained high, indicating a new behavioural mechanism was in place. Males first mated as T levels were declining. They were then challenged; then T increased, and then IID increased again. Adult male T levels fluctuate, being low or declining in a socially stable environment and increasing following a challenge, suggesting a regulatory or modulating role for T. The results are consistent with T having an endogenous role: in the juvenile, driving behavioural change towards adulthood, and in adulthood, a modulating role regulating social organisation.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19337720     DOI: 10.1007/s00114-009-0526-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Naturwissenschaften        ISSN: 0028-1042


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