Texas State University-San Marcos, Department of Biology, San Marcos, TX 78666-4615, USA.
Physiol Behav. 2012 Feb 1;105(3):885-92. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.10.024. Epub 2011 Oct 28.
Much is known about the role of hormones in the regulation of vertebrate mating behavior, including receptivity, and several components of mate choice. Hormones may modulate reproductive behavior in such a way to increase or decrease the individual's motivation, and therefore hormones may be important in mediating behavior associated with reproductive isolation. The mating complex of the all female gynogenetic Amazon mollies, Poecilia formosa, and their parental species (sailfin mollies, P. latipinna, and Atlantic mollies, P. mexicana) is a model system for studying ultimate mechanisms of species recognition. However, proximate mechanisms, such as variation in hormone levels, and the effect of hormones on sperm production have not been extensively examined. We predict that one or more of the sex steroid hormones in teleost fish (11-ketotestosterone (KT), testosterone (T), and estradiol (E)) will play a role in species recognition (during mate choice and/or sperm priming) for Atlantic mollies (the maternal parental species) that are sympatric with Amazon mollies. We sequentially paired male Atlantic mollies with female conspecifics and Amazon mollies and obtained water-borne hormone samples before and after mating for all fish. We measured circulating KT, T, and E from the water samples. Although we did not find an overall KT response to mating with conspecifics as has been found previously in sailfin mollies, male Atlantic mollies that mated more with conspecific females had lower postmating T levels. Additionally, males attempted to mate more with conspecific females that had lower postmating E levels, but attempted to mate more with Amazon mollies that had higher postmating KT levels. We also examined the effect of KT on sperm priming (a mechanism of premating mate choice), and found that KT levels of male Atlantic mollies prior to mating are correlated with the sperm priming response when males were paired with conspecific females, but this correlation was not found when males were paired with Amazon mollies. Our results indicate that male mating behavior is affecting or responding to both male and female hormones, but that the hormones alone are not playing a role in species recognition. Male Atlantic mollies may not discriminate against Amazon mollies as strongly as male sailfin mollies because Amazon mollies resemble their maternal parental species more than their paternal species.
关于激素在调节脊椎动物交配行为中的作用,包括接受性和配偶选择的几个组成部分,人们已经了解很多。激素可以调节生殖行为,增加或减少个体的动机,因此激素可能在介导与生殖隔离相关的行为中很重要。全雌单性生殖亚马逊神仙鱼(Poecilia formosa)及其亲本种(帆鳍神仙鱼,P. latipinna 和大西洋神仙鱼,P. mexicana)的交配复合体是研究物种识别终极机制的模型系统。然而,激素水平的变化等近因机制,以及激素对精子产生的影响尚未得到广泛研究。我们预测,一种或多种硬骨鱼的性激素(11-酮睾酮(KT)、睾酮(T)和雌二醇(E))将在与亚马逊神仙鱼同域分布的大西洋神仙鱼(母本亲种)的物种识别(在配偶选择和/或精子启动期间)中发挥作用。我们依次将雄性大西洋神仙鱼与同种雌性和亚马逊神仙鱼配对,并在所有鱼类交配前后从水中采集激素样本。我们从水样中测量循环 KT、T 和 E。尽管我们没有像以前在帆鳍神仙鱼中发现的那样,发现雄性与同种雌性交配时的整体 KT 反应,但与同种雌性交配更多的雄性大西洋神仙鱼的交配后 T 水平较低。此外,雄性试图与交配后 E 水平较低的同种雌性交配更多,但试图与交配后 KT 水平较高的亚马逊神仙鱼交配更多。我们还检查了 KT 对精子启动(一种交配前配偶选择的机制)的影响,发现雄性大西洋神仙鱼交配前的 KT 水平与雄性与同种雌性配对时的精子启动反应相关,但当雄性与亚马逊神仙鱼配对时,这种相关性并未发现。我们的结果表明,雄性交配行为正在影响或对雄性和雌性激素产生反应,但激素本身并不是物种识别的作用因素。雄性大西洋神仙鱼可能不像雄性帆鳍神仙鱼那样强烈排斥亚马逊神仙鱼,因为亚马逊神仙鱼与其母本亲种的相似性超过与其父本亲种的相似性。