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Hormonal correlates of 'masculinization' in female spotted hyaenas (Crocuta crocuta). 1. Infancy to sexual maturity.

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TLDR
Gonadectomy (two males and four females) at 4-7 months resulted in nondetectable concentrations of testosterone and oestrogen and a marked attenuation in androstenedione, indicating that the gonads are the major source of these three steroids.
Abstract
This report is concerned with hormone concentrations accompanying sexual maturation in a highly 'masculinized' female mammal, the spotted hyaena, Crocuta crocuta. Plasma concentrations of testosterone, androstenedione and oestrogen were determined by radioimmunoassay in a longitudinal study of 12 female and eight male hyaenas 2.5-62.5 months old. Concentrations of testosterone were significantly higher in males than in females after 26.5 months of age, but earlier measurements did not differ between sexes. Mean testosterone concentrations in adult female hyaenas (0.4-0.5 ng ml-1) were similar to those in several other female mammals that do not display a 'masculine' profile, but mean concentrations of androstenedione (2.5-5.5 ng ml-1) in female hyaenas were significantly higher than in males (1.0-2.0 ng ml-1), at most ages. Oestrogen could not be detected (less than 0.03 ng ml-1) in females until about 14 months of age and then increased (to approximately 0.13 ng ml-1) between 18 and 30 months; oestrogen remained undetectable in males. This rise in oestrogen in females corresponded to nipple enlargement and to changes in the size and elasticity of the urogenital meatus, permitting copulation and parturition through the clitoris. Gonadectomy (two males and four females) at 4-7 months resulted in nondetectable concentrations of testosterone and oestrogen and a marked attenuation in androstenedione (to approximately 0.39 ng ml-1), indicating that the gonads are the major source of these three steroids. Gonadectomy also eliminated sex differences in weight, nipple development and elasticity of the urogenital meatus.

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Estrogen: consequences and implications of human mutations in synthesis and action.

TL;DR: Study of the mutations in CYP19, the gene encoding aromatase, in six females and two males and a mutant estrogen receptor alpha in a man provide illuminating new insights into the critical role of estrogen in the male in the pubertal growth spurt and skeletal maturation, and in the importance of estrogen sufficiency in the accrual and maintenance of bone mass.
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Social and ecological determinants of fission-fusion dynamics in the spotted hyaena

TL;DR: It is found that cooperative defence of shared resources during interclan competition and protection from lions were cohesive forces that promoted formation of large subgroups of various sizes inotted hyaenas.
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The erect "penis" is a flag of submission in a female-dominated society: Greetings in the Serengeti spotted hyaenas

TL;DR: A new scenario is sketched that links (1) initial virilization to the occurrence of neonatal siblicide amongst members of a twin litter, and (2) costs of maintenance, ‘pseudo-penile’ control over copulation and male submission, and suggests new hypotheses to account for hitherto unexplained features.
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Society, demography and genetic structure in the spotted hyena

TL;DR: Although social bonds among both kin and non‐kin are weakest when resource competition is most intense, hyenas sustain strong social relationships with kin year‐round, despite constraints imposed by resource limitation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The determination of five steroids in avian plasma by radioimmunoassay and competitive protein-binding

TL;DR: Testosterone, 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone, estrone and estradiol-17beta were measured by radioimmunoassay and corticosterone by a competitive protein-binding technique and Plasma-steroid levels of eight avian species are presented and compared with those found by other investigators.
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Androgenic activity of dehydroepiandrosterone and androstenedione in the rat ventral prostate

TL;DR: In the rat, a species having no significant secretion of adrenal androgens, plasma concentrations of DHEA and delta 4-dione maintained within the range of those found in adult men are efficiently converted into DHT and act as potent androgenic stimuli in prostatic tissue.
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Reproduction in the Spotted Hyaena, Crocuta crocuta (Erxleben)

TL;DR: From time immemorial it has been known that there is something peculiar about the sexual anatomy and physiology of the spotted hyaena, but the writers of antiquity relate the legend that this animal is hermaphrodite, or that it can change its sex at will.
Journal ArticleDOI

Androgens, aggressive behaviour and social relationships in higher mammals.

TL;DR: It has generally been shown that aggressive behaviour in male ungulates depends largely on androgens and that in female ungulate androgen treatment consistently raises social rank, with or without modification in aggressiveness, and that Primates seem to be less dependent on androgen for the expression of aggressive behaviour and social status.
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