Nottebohm F, Arnold A P
Science. 1976 Oct 8;194(4261):211-3. doi: 10.1126/science.959852.
In canaries and zebra finches, three vocal control areas in the brain are strikingly larger in males than in females. A fourth, area X of the lobus parolfactorius, is well developed in males of both species, less well developed in femal canaries, and absent or not recognizable in femal zebra finches. These size differences correlate well with differences in singing behavior. Males of both species learn song by reference to auditory information, and females do not normally sing. Exogenous testosterone induces singing in female canaries but not in female zebra finches. This is believed to be the first report of such gross sexual dimorphism in a vertebrate brain.
在金丝雀和斑胸草雀中,雄性大脑中的三个发声控制区域明显比雌性的大。第四个区域,即嗅觉叶的X区,在这两个物种的雄性中发育良好,在雌性金丝雀中发育较差,而在雌性斑胸草雀中则不存在或无法识别。这些大小差异与歌唱行为的差异密切相关。这两个物种的雄性通过参考听觉信息来学习唱歌,而雌性通常不唱歌。外源性睾酮能诱导雌性金丝雀唱歌,但不能诱导雌性斑胸草雀唱歌。据信,这是脊椎动物大脑中这种明显的两性异形的首次报道。