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This blog was designed as an assignment for the
BIOL 4550 course at Memorial University of Newfoundland
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A review of the paper "Testosterone and Aggression in birds"
by John C. Wingfield, Grerogy F. Ball, Alfred M. Duffy Jr, Robert E Hegner and Marilyn Ramenofsky.
this paper can be found at:
This
paper discusses testosterone’s effects (both organizational and activational)
in various species of birds. The paper also describes the "challenge
hypothesis", in which the correlation between elevated testosterone levels and
aggression are only seen during periods of heightened interactions between
males (for example during breeding season).
The paper also mentions that levels of aggression can be influenced by: the species, social context, demographics and environmental influences. Some environmental influences include the lenght of the day (long days lead to increased testosterone), territory boundaries and challenging males (which lead to the challenge hypothesis).
The usual trend that is observed is that LH and testosterone rises in spring, remains elevated throughout the breeding season and decreases after the breeding season. Different reproductive strategies will have different levels of testosterone. Monogamous males have high levels of testosterone for short periods; during territory establishment and sometimes during egg laying phase (mate guarding). Meanwhile polygamous males have elevated levels of testosterone for longer periods of time, because they need to fight males for multiple females.
Paper
critiques
The figures were very good in illustrating some of the points of the paper. For example figure 4 helps to illustrate the different changes in the levels of plasma testosterone that are present in each reproductive strategy. While figure 3 helps to illustrate the importance of taking measurements of each phase of reproduction as opposed to just averaging the data across the entire year.
However, the figures and tables given do not have any recorded significance value associated with the data; we are eant to assume that the proper statistical tests were performed and that the data is significant. Also on figures 4 and 5, there are no scale given for the plasma testosterone levels.
Possible future experiments
Will birds (with no prior hierachies), who are injected with various levels of testosterone, form hierachies in which their status is correlated to the amount of testosterone that was injected?
In order to investigate this experiment, the researchers could observe birds and calculate a baseline aggression for each bird in each group. They could then take a bird from each group that had the same aggression rating and inject varying amounts of testosterone and place them into a neutral area. A few weeks later, the researchers could calculate baseline aggressions again to see if hierarchies formed in
relation with the amounts of testosterone that were initially injected.
References
Wingfield, J. C., Ball, G. F., Jr., A. M. D., Hegner, R. E., & Ramenofsky, M. (1987). Testosterone and aggression in birds. American Scientist, 75(6), pp. 602-608. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/27854889
