首页> 外文期刊>Hormones and behavior >Simulating winning in the wild--the behavioral and hormonal response of black redstarts to single and repeated territorial challenges of high and low intensity.
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Simulating winning in the wild--the behavioral and hormonal response of black redstarts to single and repeated territorial challenges of high and low intensity.

机译:模拟野外取胜-黑black的行为和激素反应对高强度和低强度的单个和重复区域挑战。

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In many vertebrates testosterone increases during aggressive interactions and the surges in this hormone may be responsible for the winner effect. So far studies on this relationship have been done in captivity only, because simulating a winning situation for a territory owner in the field is difficult. However, an increasing number of studies show that territorial aggression is not necessarily accompanied by elevated testosterone after a single simulated territorial intrusion (STI) and therefore it has been proposed that STIs may even create a losing experience. We examined whether free-living male black redstarts (Phoenicurus ochruros) show changes in androgens, corticosterone and behavior following repeated STIs of high or low intensity and in contrast to being challenged only once. Repeated intrusions had no influence on androgen and corticosterone levels regardless of intrusion intensity. In contrast, the behavioral response changed over days depending on the intensity of the intrusion. Only birds challenged with high-level intruders approached the decoy significantly faster during the third intrusion than during the first one, stayed closer to the decoy, and sang more songs than males challenged with low-level intruders. Thus, although black redstarts reacted differently to STIs varying in frequency and intensity, these behavioral differences were not reflected in androgen or corticosterone levels. Our data show that it is unlikely that STIs induce a losing experience. Furthermore, they indicate that a hormonal effect of winning an encounter may not be universal in vertebrates and may depend on the ecological or life-history context.
机译:在许多脊椎动物中,睾丸激素在积极的相互作用过程中会增加,这种激素的激增可能是获胜者效应的原因。到目前为止,有关这种关系的研究仅在囚禁条件下进行,因为很难为该领域的所有者模拟获胜情况。然而,越来越多的研究表明,在一次模拟的领土入侵(STI)之后,领土的侵略并不一定伴随着睾丸激素的升高,因此,有人提出STI甚至可能造成失败的经历。我们研究了自由活动的雄性黑red(Phoenicurus ochruros)在反复进行高强度或低强度性传播感染后是否表现出雄激素,皮质酮和行为的变化,而仅受到一次挑战。重复入侵对雄激素和皮质酮水平无影响,无论入侵强度如何。相反,行为反应随着入侵强度的变化而持续数天。在第三次入侵中,只有受到高级别入侵者挑战的鸟比第一个入侵者更快地接近诱饵,与诱饵相比,它们更靠近诱饵,并且唱出的歌曲要多于受到低水平入侵者挑战的雄性。因此,尽管黑red对频率和强度不同的性STI反应不同,但这些行为差异并未反映在雄激素或皮质酮水平上。我们的数据表明,性传播感染不太可能导致失去经验。此外,它们表明,赢得encounter的荷尔蒙效应在脊椎动物中可能并不普遍,并且可能取决于生态或生活史背景。

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