Literature DB >> 20688088

Early fitness consequences and hormonal correlates of parental behaviour in the social rodent, Octodon degus.

Luis A Ebensperger1, Natalia Ramírez-Otarola, Cecilia León, María E Ortiz, Horacio B Croxatto.   

Abstract

Males are expected to assist their mates whenever this behaviour raises survival of offspring with little expense in terms of mating opportunities. At a more proximate level, cortisol and testosterone hormones seem involved in the expression of parental care in mammals. We examined the consequences to postnatal offspring development and survival of the males' presence in the social rodent, Octodon degus. Offspring quality and quantity, and maternal condition of females were contrasted among females rearing their litters in the presence of the sire, females breeding in the presence of a non-breeding female, and females breeding solitarily. We related these differences to variation in parental behaviour and plasma levels of testosterone and cortisol. Twenty two females and their litters were studied under constant conditions of adult density, nest availability, food availability, and breeding experience. Males huddled over and groomed offspring. However, neither the number nor the mass of pups from dams that nested with the sire differed from those recorded to breeding females that nested with a non-breeding female and females that nested solitarily. Body weight loss and associated levels of plasma cortisol in dams nesting with the sire were similar to those of solitary females, but higher than mothers nesting with a non-breeding female. Thus, male care had no consequences to offspring, and seemed detrimental to breeding females. Circulating levels of cortisol and total testosterone were either poor (mothers) or no (fathers, non-breeding females) predictors of parental care.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20688088     DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2010.07.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  7 in total

1.  Octodon degus (Molina 1782): a model in comparative biology and biomedicine.

Authors:  Alvaro O Ardiles; John Ewer; Monica L Acosta; Alfredo Kirkwood; Agustin D Martinez; Luis A Ebensperger; Francisco Bozinovic; Theresa M Lee; Adrian G Palacios
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Protoc       Date:  2013-04-01

2.  Ecological drivers of group living in two populations of the communally rearing rodent, Octodon degus.

Authors:  Luis A Ebensperger; Raúl Sobrero; Verónica Quirici; Rodrigo A Castro; Liliana Ortiz Tolhuysen; Francisco Vargas; Joseph Robert Burger; René Quispe; Camila P Villavicencio; Rodrigo A Vásquez; Loren D Hayes
Journal:  Behav Ecol Sociobiol       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 2.980

Review 3.  Fathering in rodents: Neurobiological substrates and consequences for offspring.

Authors:  Karen L Bales; Wendy Saltzman
Journal:  Horm Behav       Date:  2015-06-26       Impact factor: 3.587

4.  Parental Behavior in Rodents.

Authors:  Mariana Pereira; Kristina O Smiley; Joseph S Lonstein
Journal:  Adv Neurobiol       Date:  2022

5.  Reproductive correlates of social network variation in plurally breeding degus (Octodon degus).

Authors:  Tina W Wey; Joseph R Burger; Luis A Ebensperger; Loren D Hayes
Journal:  Anim Behav       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 2.844

6.  Gut reaction! Neotropical nectar-feeding bats responses to direct and indirect costs of extreme environmental temperatures.

Authors:  Stephanie Ortega-García; Daniel Ferreyra-García; Jorge E Schondube
Journal:  J Comp Physiol B       Date:  2020-06-29       Impact factor: 2.230

7.  Paternal deprivation affects the functional maturation of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)- and calbindin-D28k-expressing neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) of the biparental Octodon degus.

Authors:  Tomasz Gos; Jay Schulkin; Anna Gos; Joerg Bock; Gerd Poeggel; Katharina Braun
Journal:  Brain Struct Funct       Date:  2013-08-03       Impact factor: 3.270

  7 in total

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