Kendrick K M, Haupt M A, Hinton M R, Broad K D, Skinner J D
Department of Neurobiology, Babraham, Cambridge CB2 4AT, United Kingdom.
Horm Behav. 2001 Sep;40(2):322-38. doi: 10.1006/hbeh.2001.1672.
The extent to which "nurture" as opposed to "nature" determines behavior and sociosexual preferences in mammalian species is controversial although most recent interest has focused on genetic determinants. We report here that if sheep and goats are cross-fostered at birth, but raised in mixed-species groups, their play and grooming behavior resembles that of their foster rather than genetic species. There are no sex differences in effects on these behaviors, and other species-specific behavior patterns such as aggression, browsing, climbing, and vocalizations are unaffected. In adulthood, cross-fostered males strongly prefer to socialize and mate with females of their foster mother's species, even if raised with a conspecific of their own species. Castration within 2 days of birth slightly reduces the level of this altered social preference but mating preference following short-term testosterone treatment is the same as for gonadally intact animals. Cross-fostered females also show significant preference for socializing with females and mating with males of their foster mother's species, although this effect is weaker than that in both gonadally intact and castrated males. When cross-fostered animals are placed in flocks containing members of only their genetic species for 3 years, male social and mating preferences for females of their mother's species remain virtually unaffected. Females change to display an exclusive mating preference for members of their genetic species in 1-2 years although they still retain some social interest in female members of their foster species. Thus, there are clear sex differences in the impact of the emotional bond between a mother and her offspring in these mammals. Effects on males are strongest and irreversibly maintained even after altering their social environment, whereas those on females are weaker and mating preferences are clearly adaptable in the face of altered social priorities. These sex differences are presumably caused by pre-, or early postnatal, organizational effects of sex hormones on the brain.
在哺乳动物物种中,与“天性”相对的“养育”在多大程度上决定行为和社会性别偏好存在争议,尽管最近的研究兴趣主要集中在基因决定因素上。我们在此报告,如果绵羊和山羊在出生时进行交叉寄养,但在混合物种群体中饲养,它们的玩耍和梳理行为与其寄养物种而非基因所属物种相似。对这些行为的影响不存在性别差异,其他物种特异性行为模式,如攻击、啃食、攀爬和发声也不受影响。成年后,交叉寄养的雄性强烈倾向于与寄养母亲物种的雌性交往和交配,即使与自己物种的同类一起饲养。出生后2天内阉割会略微降低这种改变后的社会偏好水平,但短期睾酮治疗后的交配偏好与性腺完整的动物相同。交叉寄养的雌性也表现出明显偏好与寄养母亲物种的雌性交往,并与该物种的雄性交配,尽管这种影响比性腺完整和阉割的雄性都要弱。当交叉寄养的动物在只包含其基因所属物种成员的羊群中饲养3年时,雄性对其母亲物种雌性的社会和交配偏好几乎不受影响。雌性在1 - 2年内会转变为对其基因所属物种的成员表现出排他性的交配偏好,尽管它们对寄养物种的雌性成员仍保留一些社交兴趣。因此,在这些哺乳动物中,母亲与后代之间情感纽带的影响存在明显的性别差异。对雄性的影响最强,即使改变其社会环境也能不可逆转地维持,而对雌性的影响较弱,面对社会优先级的改变,交配偏好明显具有适应性。这些性别差异可能是由性激素在产前或产后早期对大脑的组织作用引起的。