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Journal ArticleDOI

Opposite Changes in Plasma Testosterone and Corticosterone Levels Following a Simulated Territorial Challenge in Male Great Tits

E. Van Duyse, +4 more
- 01 Jan 2004 - 
- Vol. 141, Iss: 4, pp 451-467
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TLDR
A role for B rather than T in the regulation of territorial defence in male great tits is suggested, which does not agree with the predictions of the 'challenge hypothesis' that males exposed to a territorial challenge while having breeding baseline T levels will respond with an increase in T or that T correlates with the intensity of aggression during a challenge.
Abstract
The apparent ability of plasma testosterone (T) and corticosterone (B) levels to fluctuate rapidly in response to agonistic interactions, suggests that these hormones may play an important role in an animal's acute behavioural response during such interactions. In the present study, free-living male great tits, Parus major, were subjected to a simulated territorial intrusion (STI) during the egg laying, incubation and nestling stage of first broods. Plasma T and B levels of challenged males were compared to those of control males matched for breeding stage, day in breeding stage, and time of day. Plasma B levels were significantly higher in challenged males compared to control males during the egg laying and incubation stage but not during the nestling stage. On the other hand, challenged males had significantly lower plasma T levels than control males throughout the breeding cycle. While having low plasma T and elevated plasma B levels, challenged males showed a vigorous and unrelenting territorial response to the STI. Plasma T and B levels of challenged males did not correlate with the intensity of the behavioural response to the STI. These findings do not agree with the predictions of the 'challenge hypothesis' that males exposed to a territorial challenge while having breeding baseline T levels will respond with an increase in T or that T correlates with the intensity of aggression during a challenge. Together, our findings suggest a role for B rather than T in the regulation of territorial defence in male great tits.

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Citations
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The ecology of stress: effects of the social environment

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Distinguishing seasonal androgen responses from male-male androgen responsiveness - Revisiting the Challenge Hypothesis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that R(seasonal) and R(male-male) are fundamentally different and should be treated as separate variables and related to the natural history of single- and multiple-brooded species and suggested a research approach to increase the understanding of the factors that determine different types of androgen responses.
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Natural variation in a testosterone-mediated trade-off between mating effort and parental effort.

TL;DR: Natural variation in testosterone, specifically the production of short‐term increases, may underlie individual variation in the mating effort/parental effort trade‐off in male birds.
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The "Challenge Hypothesis": Theoretical Implications for Patterns of Testosterone Secretion, Mating Systems, and Breeding Strategies

TL;DR: This model indicates that there may be widely different hormonal responses to male-male and male-female interactions and presumably equally plastic neural mechanisms for the transduction of these signals into endocrine secretions.
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TL;DR: Six hypotheses are proposed to explain how costs of high testosterone levels in blood may be avoided and may reveal many mechanisms resulting from selection to avoid the costs of testosterone.
Journal Article

Testosterone and Aggression in Birds

TL;DR: The complexities of aggressive behaviors and their regulation are focused on species differences in territorial behavior of male birds as models for the multiple interactions of hormones, envi ronment, and behavior.
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