Rhen T, Crews D
Section of Integrative Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at Austin, TX 78712, USA.
Neuroendocrinology. 2000 Apr;71(4):252-61. doi: 10.1159/000054543.
Gonadal sex is determined by the temperature experienced during incubation in the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius). Furthermore, both factors, incubation temperature and gonadal sex, influence adult sexual and agonistic behavior in this species. Yet it is unclear whether such differences in behavior are irreversibly organized during development or are mediated by differences in hormone levels in adulthood. To address this question, we gonadectomized adult females and males generated from a female-biased (30 degrees C) and a male-biased (32.5 degrees C) incubation temperature and treated them with equivalent levels of various sex steroids. We found that 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) activated sexual receptivity in females but not males, suggesting an organized sex difference in behavioral sensitivity to E(2). There were also organized and activated sex differences in attractivity to stimulus males. Although females were more attractive than males when treated with E(2), both sexes were equally unattractive when treated with dihydrotestosterone (DHT) or testosterone (T). Likewise, sex differences in aggressive and submissive behavior were organized and activated. Attacks on stimulus males were activated by T in males but not in females. In contrast, hormones did not influence flight behavior in males but did affect female submissiveness. Overall, males also evoked more attacks by stimulus males than did females. Nevertheless, females and males treated with androgens evoked more attacks than animals of the same sex that were treated with cholesterol or E(2). Incubation temperature had some weak effects on certain behaviors and no effect on others. This suggests that temperature effects in gonadally intact geckos may be due primarily to differences in circulating levels of hormones in adulthood. We conclude that gonadal sex has both organizational and activational effects on various behaviors in the leopard gecko.
豹纹守宫(Eublepharis macularius)的性腺性别由孵化期间所经历的温度决定。此外,孵化温度和性腺性别这两个因素都会影响该物种成年后的性行为和攻击行为。然而,尚不清楚这种行为差异是在发育过程中不可逆地形成的,还是由成年期激素水平的差异介导的。为了解决这个问题,我们对由偏向雌性(30摄氏度)和偏向雄性(32.5摄氏度)的孵化温度产生的成年雌性和雄性进行性腺切除,并给它们注射同等水平的各种性类固醇。我们发现,17β-雌二醇(E₂)激活了雌性的性接受能力,但未激活雄性的,这表明在行为对E₂的敏感性方面存在一种固有的性别差异。在对刺激雄性的吸引力方面也存在固有的和激活后的性别差异。在用E₂处理时,雌性比雄性更具吸引力,但在用二氢睾酮(DHT)或睾酮(T)处理时,两性同样缺乏吸引力。同样,攻击和顺从行为的性别差异也具有固有性且会被激活。雄性对刺激雄性的攻击会被T激活,而雌性则不会。相比之下,激素不影响雄性的逃避行为,但会影响雌性的顺从性。总体而言,雄性也比雌性更容易引发刺激雄性的攻击。然而,用雄激素处理的雌性和雄性比用胆固醇或E₂处理的同性动物引发了更多攻击。孵化温度对某些行为有一些微弱影响,对其他行为则没有影响。这表明性腺完整的守宫的温度效应可能主要是由于成年期循环激素水平的差异。我们得出结论,性腺性别对豹纹守宫的各种行为具有组织和激活作用。