Social cues influence growth and sexual maturation of the male musk shrew (Suncus murinus)
Autor: | N. L. Wayne, Emilie F. Rissman, S. E. Taymans |
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Rok vydání: | 1990 |
Předmět: |
Male
Embryology medicine.drug_class media_common.quotation_subject Physiology Genitalia Male Biology Endocrinology medicine Animals Weaning Sexual maturity Sexual Maturation Social Behavior media_common Shrews Insectivora Body Weight Obstetrics and Gynecology Organ Size Cell Biology Suncus Anatomy Androgen biology.organism_classification Accelerated Growth Reproductive Medicine Androgens Female Cues Reproduction Cage |
Zdroj: | Reproduction. 89:697-706 |
ISSN: | 1741-7899 1470-1626 |
DOI: | 10.1530/jrf.0.0890697 |
Popis: | Musk shrews were maintained from weaning (20 days of age) for 20 or 40 days in one of several social conditions. In Exp. 1, young males housed with adult females gained more weight and had heavier sex accessory organs than did young males housed with an adult male or reared alone. In Exp. 2 this same pattern of accelerated growth and sexual maturation was found when males were reared directly with an adult female or in a split cage where a wire barrier served to separate the male and his adult female cagemate. In Exp. 3, males were reared in cages containing clean or soiled bedding: soiled bedding was taken once every 5 days from the cage of an adult male, or a female. Under these conditions differences in the weights of reproductive tissues showed minimal variation with housing condition after 20 days of treatment. At that time males reared in soiled bedding taken from the cage of an adult female had accelerated development compared with control males. In Exp. 4, males were housed alone or in a split cage with an adult female which was separated by a wire mesh or a solid, opaque barrier. Males separated by a solid barrier from their female cagemates for 40 days had reproductive tissue weights equivalent to those measured in males reared alone. Taken together these results suggest that the presence of an adult female has dramatic effects on body growth and development of reproductive target tissues in young male musk shrews. Male-female social interactions could play an important role in the timing of puberty in this opportunistically breeding tropical mammal. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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