Juvenile Males (juvenile + male)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Hippocampal lesions impair spatial memory performance, but not song,A developmental study of independent memory systems in the zebra finch

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2009
David J. Bailey
Abstract Songbirds demonstrate song- and spatial-learning, forms of memory that appear distinct in formal characteristics and fitting the descriptions and criteria of procedural and episodic-like memory function, respectively. As in other vertebrates, the neural pathways underlying these forms of memory may also be dissociable, and include the corresponding song circuit and hippocampus (HP). Whether (or not) these two memory systems interact is unknown. Interestingly, the HP distinguishes itself as a site of immediate early gene expression in response to song and as a site of estrogen synthesis, a steroid involved in song learning. Thus, an interaction between these memory systems and their anatomical substrates appears reasonable to hypothesize, particularly during development. To test this idea, juvenile male or female zebra finches received chemical lesions of the HP at various points during song learning, as did adults. Song structure, singing behavior, song preference, and spatial memory were tested in adulthood. Although lesions of the HP severely compromised HP-dependent spatial memory function across all ages and in both sexes, we were unable to detect any effects of HP lesions on song learning, singing, or song structure in males. Interestingly, females lesioned as adults, but not as juveniles, did lose the characteristic preference for their father's song. Since compromise of the neural circuits that subserve episodic-like memory does very little (if anything) to affect procedural-like (song learning) memory, we conclude that these memory systems and their anatomical substrates are well dissociated in the developing male zebra finch. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 2009 [source]


A female Lucifer Hummingbird (Calothorax lucifer) with iridescent chin feathers

JOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY, Issue 1 2006
Raúl Ortiz-Pulido
ABSTRACT We report an observation of a female Lucifer Hummingbird (Calothorax lucifer) with iridescent feathers on the chin, resembling the plumage of the juvenile male. The female and nest were found in a xeric shrubland in Barranca de Metztitlán Biosphere Reserve, Hidalgo State, Mexico. This is the first definitive report of a breeding female with such plumage, supporting a previous observation in which sex was not confirmed by behavior. Although this condition appears be rare in female Lucifer Hummingbirds, females in other species of hummingbirds exhibit much variation in the amount of iridescent plumage on the chin and in some, such as Costa's Hummingbirds (Calypte costae), females commonly exhibit colored feathers on the chin. SINOPSIS Reportamos una observacion de una hembra de colibrí Lucifer (Calothorax lucifer) con plumas iridiscentes en el babero, parecidas al plumaje de un macho juvenil. La hembra, la cual estaba incubando, fue encontrada en un área arbustiva xerofítica en la Reserva Biosférica Barranca de Metztitlan, en Hidalgo, México. Este es el primer informe definitivo de una hembra reproductora con este tipo de plumaje, en apoyo a una observación previa en donde el sexo no fue confirmado. Esta condición parece ser rara en estas aves en contraste con otras especies de zumbadores como Calypte costae, pero común en otras especies dimórficas de México y de los Estados Unidos. [source]


Sex differences in juvenile rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) agonistic screams: Life history differences and effects of prenatal androgens

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
Michelle L. Tomaszycki
Abstract This study investigated sex differences in juvenile rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) vocal behavior during agonistic contexts, and the effects of prenatal androgens on these differences. A total of 59 subjects (5,8 per treatment group) received exogenous androgen (testosterone enanthate), an anti-androgen (flutamide) or vehicle injections (DMSO) for 30 or 35 days during the second (early) or third (late) trimester of pregnancy. An additional 19 unmanipulated controls were included in the analysis. Screams by juvenile males and females between the ages of 1 and 3 years were compared to the screams of adult female exemplars using a discriminant function analysis. Juvenile females produced more adult-female like screams than did juvenile males. Females exposed to androgen treatment late in gestation produced a more masculine pattern of screams. Flutamide treatment in males either early or late in gestation did not significantly affect scream production. Flutamide treatments in females late in gestation, however, masculinized scream production. Androgen treatments administered late in gestation hyper-masculinized male scream production. No sex differences in the contextual usage of screams emerged. These findings suggest that both life history differences and the early hormone environment contribute to sex differences in juvenile rhesus macaque vocal production. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 47: 318,327, 2005. [source]


Opening the Social Gateway: Early Vocal and Social Sensitivities in Brown-Headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater)

ETHOLOGY, Issue 1 2002
David J. White
The organization of cowbird (Molothrus ater) social groups affords individuals living in the groups different opportunities for learning and also structures trajectories of social development. Here, we studied the influence of adults on social organization of very young cowbirds. In three experiments, we housed juvenile birds in large, seminatural environments that either contained or did not contain adult conspecifics. We then observed the social associations and vocalizations of juveniles in each environment. The presence of adults in the social environment influenced the assortment and singing patterns of juveniles, although throughout the three experiments adults rarely interacted physically with juveniles. Juveniles housed with adults interacted with other juveniles more often and sang significantly less often than juveniles housed without adults. Effects of adult presence or absence on social organization and singing patterns emerged extremely rapidly and could be reversed quickly. Taken as a whole, the experiments revealed that very young cowbirds, in the first days of independence from their hosts, were sensitive to, and reacted rapidly to, the composition of their social environment. Specifically, presence of other age classes of individuals within the group increased juvenile associations and delayed production of vocalizations by juvenile males. Self-organization within the social group produced different social environments, which could in turn create different gateways for social learning and vocal development. [source]


Starvation mortality and body condition of Goshawks Accipiter gentilis along a latitudinal gradient in Norway

IBIS, Issue 2 2002
Peter Sunde
Relative starvation risk and body condition were investigated in 599 Goshawks that had died in collision accidents or of starvation. Specimens were collected by the public along a 1300-km north,south (58°N,71°N) gradient in Norway, representing the northernmost geographical range of the species. The probability of a Goshawk's death being caused by starvation as opposed to by a collision accident increased with latitude with juvenile males at a disproportionately higher risk than others. Of birds killed in accidents, females generally were in better condition than males, and adults in better condition than juveniles. A season-by-latitude interaction indicated that males from northern latitudes were in poorer condition during winter and spring than males from southern parts of the country. This could also be modelled as a curvilinear relationship with daylength. There were no significant relationships between weather factors in the weeks prior to the deaths of the birds and the relative starvation probability or the condition of trauma victims. The results suggest that food limitation plays a relatively higher role in northern populations, affecting young males especially. This was also supported by the fact that the sex ratio of accidentally killed birds was increasingly female biased with increasing latitudes. It is suggested that the relatively higher mortality risk of males is due to their smaller average body size, and that selection for starvation resistance during winter is the reason behind the clinal increase of body size in Goshawks towards the northern and eastern parts of Europe. [source]


Testing reversed sexual dominance from an ontogenetic perspective: juvenile female House Finches Carpodacus mexicanus are dominant to juvenile males

IBIS, Issue 1 2002
Kevin J. Mcgraw
[source]


Host sex and ectoparasites choice: preference for, and higher survival on female hosts

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2007
PHILIPPE CHRISTE
Summary 1Sex differences in levels of parasite infection are a common rule in a wide range of mammals, with males usually more susceptible than females. Sex-specific exposure to parasites, e.g. mediated through distinct modes of social aggregation between and within genders, as well as negative relationships between androgen levels and immune defences are thought to play a major role in this pattern. 2Reproductive female bats live in close association within clusters at maternity roosts, whereas nonbreeding females and males generally occupy solitary roosts. Bats represent therefore an ideal model to study the consequences of sex-specific social and spatial aggregation on parasites' infection strategies. 3We first compared prevalence and parasite intensities in a host,parasite system comprising closely related species of ectoparasitic mites (Spinturnix spp.) and their hosts, five European bat species. We then compared the level of parasitism between juvenile males and females in mixed colonies of greater and lesser mouse-eared bats Myotis myotis and M. blythii. Prevalence was higher in adult females than in adult males stemming from colonial aggregations in all five studied species. Parasite intensity was significantly higher in females in three of the five species studied. No difference in prevalence and mite numbers was found between male and female juveniles in colonial roosts. 4To assess whether observed sex-biased parasitism results from differences in host exposure only, or, alternatively, from an active, selected choice made by the parasite, we performed lab experiments on short-term preferences and long-term survival of parasites on male and female Myotis daubentoni. When confronted with adult males and females, parasites preferentially selected female hosts, whereas no choice differences were observed between adult females and subadult males. Finally, we found significantly higher parasite survival on adult females compared with adult males. 5Our study shows that social and spatial aggregation favours sex-biased parasitism that could be a mere consequence of an active and adaptive parasite choice for the more profitable host. [source]


Sex-biased juvenile survival in a bird with extreme size dimorphism, the great bustard Otis tarda

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2007
Carlos A. Martín
We explored sex-biased mortality patterns in a species showing the most extreme sexual dimorphism among birds, the great bustard Otis tarda. Between 1991 and 2005 we studied juvenile and immature survival in a sample of 361 great bustards radio-tagged at two different populations in Spain, Villafáfila and Madrid. Mortality decreased with age, from high rates during the first year (0.70), to 0.10 in the second year. Using the known-fate model in program MARK we found that monthly survival increased throughout the first year. Offspring showing higher body mass at marking, i.e. those hatched earlier in the season and those with better body condition, survived in higher proportion. This was probably related to the earlier breeding dates of more experienced mothers, as well as to the observed decrease in food availability as the season progresses. Monthly survival estimates were higher in females than in males, which suggests that juvenile males are more vulnerable to reduced food availability and other factors due to their much faster growth rates. The proportion of non-natural deaths increased with age, and was higher in the Madrid population, where illegal hunting and collision with powerlines showed a high incidence. The male-biased mortality found in young birds in this study explains the female-biased population sex ratios observed in great bustard populations. The different degrees of incidence of human-induced causes of mortality found between both populations studied suggest that such differences may contribute to the variation observed in the adult sex ratio among populations. [source]


Absence of seasonal variation in great tit offspring sex ratios

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
Nanette Verboven
When the timing of breeding affects the reproductive value of sons and daughters differently, parents are expected to increase their fitness by changing the offspring sex ratio during the course of the breeding season. Previous studies have shown that in great tits Parus major hatching date has a stronger effect on the fitness of juvenile males than on that of juvenile females. We tested whether this difference was reflected in a seasonal decline in the proportion of sons per breeding attempt. Although offspring sex ratio was more variable than would be expected from a binomial distribution, there was no significant relationship between the proportion of sons and the laying date of the clutch. Moreover, individual females did not adjust the sex ratio of their offspring following an experimental delay of breeding. This study therefore fails to demonstrate adaptive seasonal variation in great tit offspring sex ratios. [source]


Endocrine mechanisms of primate life history trade-offs: Growth and reproductive maturation in vervet monkeys

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2009
Patricia L. Whitten
Life history theory predicts that the timing of maturation will result from a trade-off between growth and the age of first reproduction. This trade-off and its mechanisms of action are still poorly understood in many species and have not been well studied at the individual level. This study examined hypothesized trade-offs between growth and reproductive maturation in wild populations of vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) from Kenya, East Africa. Individuals were sampled from four populations in widely separated sites differing in temperature, altitude, and rainfall. Biological samples and morphometric measures were collected from 50 adult males, 83 adult females, and 225 juveniles. Gonadal steroids and leptin levels were analyzed by radioimmunoassay of sera from 136 juvenile males and 90 juvenile females. Cross-sectional profiles of morphometric and endocrine data were used to assess the onset and cessation of growth in relation to sexual maturation. Gonadal steroids were used to assess sexual maturation and breeding onset. Leptin was used as an index of nutritional state. Estimates of mortality were derived from population age-structure. Across populations, higher resource productivity and nutrient status were associated with more rapid growth. Shorter growth duration was associated with earlier reproductive onset. These findings provide support for models of trade-offs between the timing of growth completion and reproductive onset, but they are contradicted by the evidence that reproduction precedes the cessation of growth in these populations. The biphasic actions of estradiol provide an alternative model and mechanism for the growth-reproduction trade-off. Am. J. Hum. Biol., 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]