George Elizabeth M, Navarro David, Rosvall Kimberly A
Indiana University, Department of Biology, United States of America; Indiana University, Center for the Integrated Study of Animal Behavior, United States of America.
Indiana University, Center for the Integrated Study of Animal Behavior, United States of America.
Horm Behav. 2021 Apr;130:104964. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2021.104964. Epub 2021 Mar 11.
Decades of comparative and experimental work suggest that testosterone (T) promotes mating effort at the expense of parental effort in many vertebrates. There is abundant evidence that T-mediated trade-offs span both evolutionary and seasonal timescales, as T is often higher in species or breeding stages with greater mating competition and lower in association with parental effort. However, it is less clear whether transient elevations in T within a male's own reactive scope can affect parental effort in the same way, with effects that are visible to natural selection. Here, we injected free-living male tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), thus temporarily maximizing T production within an individual's own limit. Passive loggers at each nest showed that GnRH-injected males provisioned more frequently than saline males for the subsequent day, and their offspring gained more mass during that time. The degree of offspring growth was positively correlated with the father's degree of T elevation, but provisioning was not proportional to changes in T, and GnRH- and saline-injected males did not differ in corticosterone secretion. These results suggest that prior knowledge of T-mediated trade-offs garnered from seasonal, evolutionary, and experimental research cannot necessarily be generalized to the timescale of transient fluctuations in T secretion within an individual. Instead, we propose that GnRH-induced T fluctuations may not result in visible trade-offs if selection has already sculpted an individual male's reactive scope based on his ability to handle the competing demands of mating and parental care.
数十年的比较研究和实验工作表明,在许多脊椎动物中,睾酮(T)会以牺牲亲代投入为代价来促进交配投入。有大量证据表明,T介导的权衡跨越了进化和季节时间尺度,因为在交配竞争更激烈的物种或繁殖阶段,T通常较高,而与亲代投入相关时则较低。然而,尚不清楚雄性自身反应范围内T的短暂升高是否会以同样的方式影响亲代投入,以及这种影响是否能被自然选择所察觉。在这里,我们给自由生活的雄性双色树燕注射促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH),从而在个体自身限度内暂时使T的分泌最大化。每个巢穴处的被动记录器显示,注射GnRH的雄性在随后一天比注射生理盐水的雄性更频繁地喂食,且在此期间它们的后代体重增加更多。后代生长程度与父亲T升高的程度呈正相关,但喂食频率与T的变化不成比例,并且注射GnRH和注射生理盐水的雄性在皮质酮分泌方面没有差异。这些结果表明,从季节性、进化性和实验性研究中获得的关于T介导的权衡的先验知识不一定能推广到个体内T分泌的短暂波动时间尺度上。相反,我们提出,如果选择已经根据个体雄性处理交配和亲代抚育竞争需求的能力塑造了其反应范围,那么GnRH诱导的T波动可能不会导致明显的权衡。