TY - JOUR
T1 - Mating season aggression and fecal testosterone levels in male ring- tailed lemurs (Lemur catta)
AU - Cavigelli, Sonia A.
AU - Pereira, Michael E.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by funding from the Sigma Xi Scientific Research Society (S.A.C.) and the S. F. Hughes Endowment Fund (M.E.P.). The research would have been impossible without the generous donation of laboratory space and equipment usage by M. Freemark in the Pediatric Endocrinology Laboratory at the Duke University Medical Center. We are grateful to P. Feeser for her expert blood sampling under trying conditions and to D. Brewer for his expert care, capture, and handling of the forest-living lemurs. P. Whitten provided laboratory space in which initial fecal extraction methods were tested and she along with E. Russell and R. Stavisky provided patient training in these methods. S. Lackey at the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center Assay Lab conducted the assays to determine male lemur serum testosterone concentrations. C. Hicks assisted with behavioral data collection. C. J. Erick-son and C. L. Williams provided helpful suggestions on early versions of this manuscript. M.E.P. thanks T.-J. Pyer for financial and personal support throughout the period of research. This is Duke University Primate Center Publication No. 714.
PY - 2000/5
Y1 - 2000/5
N2 - The challenge hypothesis (J. C. Wingfield, R. E. Hegner, B. G. Ball, and A. M. Duffy, 1990, Am. Nat. 136, 829-846) proposes that in birds, reptiles, and fish, 'the frequency or intensity of reproductive aggression as an effect of T[estosterone] is strongest in situations of social instability, such as during the formation of dominance relationships, the establishment of territorial boundaries, or challenges by a conspecific male for a territory or access to mates' (p. 833). To determine the extension of this hypothesis to mammalian species, we tested predictions of the hypothesis in a nonpaternal, seasonal breeding, prosimian primate (ring-tailed lemurs, Lemur catta). Semi-free-ranging males were studied during periods of social stability (premating period) and instability (mating period). The annual mating season consists of several days during which males fight for access to promiscuous group females as each individually becomes sexually receptive for 1 day. Male rates of aggression were compared to fecal testosterone levels within premating and mating periods. In the premating period male rate of aggression was not significantly correlated with testosterone level. By contrast, during the mating season testosterone and aggression levels were positively and significantly correlated. However, on days just preceding estrus, male rate of aggression was not significantly correlated with testosterone, but on days of estrus, when aggressive challenges peaked sharply, testosterone and aggression were highly positively correlated. These results suggest that the challenge hypothesis applies to mammals as well as to birds, reptiles, and fish. In addition, elevations in testosterone were tightly circumscribed around days of estrus, suggesting a compromise between costs and benefits of elevated testosterone levels. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
AB - The challenge hypothesis (J. C. Wingfield, R. E. Hegner, B. G. Ball, and A. M. Duffy, 1990, Am. Nat. 136, 829-846) proposes that in birds, reptiles, and fish, 'the frequency or intensity of reproductive aggression as an effect of T[estosterone] is strongest in situations of social instability, such as during the formation of dominance relationships, the establishment of territorial boundaries, or challenges by a conspecific male for a territory or access to mates' (p. 833). To determine the extension of this hypothesis to mammalian species, we tested predictions of the hypothesis in a nonpaternal, seasonal breeding, prosimian primate (ring-tailed lemurs, Lemur catta). Semi-free-ranging males were studied during periods of social stability (premating period) and instability (mating period). The annual mating season consists of several days during which males fight for access to promiscuous group females as each individually becomes sexually receptive for 1 day. Male rates of aggression were compared to fecal testosterone levels within premating and mating periods. In the premating period male rate of aggression was not significantly correlated with testosterone level. By contrast, during the mating season testosterone and aggression levels were positively and significantly correlated. However, on days just preceding estrus, male rate of aggression was not significantly correlated with testosterone, but on days of estrus, when aggressive challenges peaked sharply, testosterone and aggression were highly positively correlated. These results suggest that the challenge hypothesis applies to mammals as well as to birds, reptiles, and fish. In addition, elevations in testosterone were tightly circumscribed around days of estrus, suggesting a compromise between costs and benefits of elevated testosterone levels. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
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U2 - 10.1006/hbeh.2000.1585
DO - 10.1006/hbeh.2000.1585
M3 - Article
C2 - 10868488
AN - SCOPUS:0034039798
SN - 0018-506X
VL - 37
SP - 246
EP - 255
JO - Hormones and Behavior
JF - Hormones and Behavior
IS - 3
ER -