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Only Males (only + male)
Selected AbstractsNon-breeding behaviour of Magenta Petrels Pterodroma magentae at Chatham Island, New ZealandIBIS, Issue 4 2005M. J. IMBER Magenta Petrels Pterodroma magentae were caught at light-attraction stations on southwest Chatham Island, New Zealand, and most were fitted with transmitters. Of 52 captured since 1993, 71% were males, and all 36 tracked adequately proved to be non-breeders in the breeding season of capture. Our data indicated no sex bias in their probability of being captured at lights. Males provided 86% of trackings, and 87% of trackings of birds flying over the breeding area were males. Males landed 118 times; females 13 times. Only males were found on the ground, by night and day, apparently unassociated with burrows (three with and ten without transmitters), but subsequently digging burrows (n = 8). Of 19 birds banded as fledglings up to 2000, males were first recaptured nearing 4 years old (at lights and on the ground) and a female nearing 6 years old (in burrow). Among 37 fledglings, the sex ratio was even. Nine tracked males occupied burrows, as did two females, but the latter were older recaptures (10+ and 25+ years old). It appears that only males claimed existing, or dug new, burrows. They then attracted a mate to the burrow by means unknown, but from among females frequenting an inshore courtship area near the colony, or occasionally flying over the colony, at night. Females established in burrows, but then losing their mate, were able to re-mate there, by calling from near the burrow or by attracting a mate in flight or from the postulated inshore courtship area. Both sexes sometimes took years to pair or re-mate, possibly reflecting the dearth of available mates. [source] Scream,embrace displays in wild black-horned capuchin monkeysAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2008Jessica Lynch Alfaro Abstract Reintroduction of capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) into their social group in captivity can elicit sirena screams and embraces. Captive scream,embrace displays are male biased, and females never perform sirena screams. One hypothesis is that scream,embrace displays serve a tension-reduction or reconciliatory function between males with conflicting interests. Alternatively, these displays may function to maintain strong affiliative bonds between friendly male dyads. Scream and/or embrace displays in wild Brazilian black-horned capuchins were analyzed for social and ecological contexts, behavioral components, and individuals involved. Seventy-two displays were observed during the 199-day study period. Among the 66 displays for which both members could be identified by sex, there were 42 occurrences of male,male dyads, 17 of male,female dyads, and seven of female,female dyads. Scream,embrace dyads were male,male pairs significantly more often than expected from group membership, and the , male was the only male to engage in scream,embrace displays with females. Female,female pairs did embrace, but never emitted sirena screams. Displays most commonly occurred in "reunion" contexts, primarily the reuniting of subgroups after hours or days out of contact, but also after intergroup encounters, and across groups in "intergroup" displays. Displays were rare, but socially contagious, and subgroup reunions could elicit multiple displays in rapid succession. Although the occurrence of screams and embraces was positively correlated, both behaviors also occurred independently, and their functions may be different. Male sirena screams may be honest advertisements of united alliances, directed toward a third party, whereas the embrace may be a risky affiliative signal, directed primarily within the dyad. Am. J. Primatol. 70:551,559, 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] The sexually dimorphic expression of L7/SPA, an estrogen receptor coactivator, in zebra finch telencephalonDEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 14 2007Kelli A. Duncan Abstract Sex differences in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) brain are robust and include differences in morphology (song control nuclei in males are significantly larger) and behavior (only males sing courtship songs). In zebra finches, hormonal manipulations during development fail to reverse sex differences in song nuclei size and suggest that the classical model of sexual differentiation is incomplete for birds. Coactivators act to initiate transcriptional activity of steroid receptors, and may help explain why hormonal manipulations alone are not sufficient to demasculinize the male zebra finch brain. The present study investigated the expression and localization of L7/SPA (an estrogen receptor coactivator) mRNA and protein expression across the development of zebra finch song nuclei from males and females collected on P1 (song nuclei not yet formed), P10 (posthatch day 10, song nuclei formed), P30 (30 days posthatch, sexually immature but song nuclei formed and birds learning to sing), and adult birds (older than 65 days and sexually mature). Northern blot analysis showed a significant sex difference in P1 and adult L7/SPA mRNA expression while Western blot analysis also showed enhanced expression in the male brain at all age points. Both in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry demonstrated that L7/SPA mRNA and protein were located in the song nuclei as well as expressed globally. Elevated coactivator expression may be a possible mechanism controlling the development of male song control nuclei, and coactivators such as L7/SPA may be important regulators of the masculinizing effects of estradiol on brain sexual differentiation. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2007. [source] Skewed sex ratios and multiple founding in galls of the oak apple gall wasp Biorhiza pallidaECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 1 2003Rachel J. Atkinson Abstract. 1. The gall wasp Biorhiza pallida (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) reproduces by cyclical parthenogenesis. The adults of the sexual generation develop within galls (oak apples) that contain many larval cells. 2. Folliot [(1964) Annales Des Sciences Naturelles: Zoologie, 12, 407,564] found asexual generation females to be of three reproductive types. Androphores produce only sons, gynophores produce only daughters, and gynandrophores produce both sons and daughters. In nature, most oak apples give rise to either only males or only females but a proportion produces both sexes. These mixed-sex galls could result either from eggs laid by one or more gynandrophores or from eggs laid by androphores and gynophores developing within a single gall (multiple founding). 3.,Here the frequency of mixed- and single-sex galls was quantified, and morphological and genetic analyses were carried out on the adults emerging from 10 galls to determine the frequency of multiple founding in B. pallida. 4. Seventy-five per cent of 627 galls yielded only one sex. The majority of the remaining 25% had a highly skewed sex ratio. Low genetic variation in B. pallida limited the application of allozyme-based genetic techniques, however seven of the 10 galls analysed in detail, including mixed-sex galls, appeared to have been multiply founded. Contributions by the different foundresses in multiply founded galls were highly skewed. 5. The significance of multiple founding is discussed in the light of possible adaptive scenarios (reduction of parasitoid-induced mortality, avoidance of local stochastic extinction and inbreeding) and possible competition for oviposition sites. [source] Non-breeding behaviour of Magenta Petrels Pterodroma magentae at Chatham Island, New ZealandIBIS, Issue 4 2005M. J. IMBER Magenta Petrels Pterodroma magentae were caught at light-attraction stations on southwest Chatham Island, New Zealand, and most were fitted with transmitters. Of 52 captured since 1993, 71% were males, and all 36 tracked adequately proved to be non-breeders in the breeding season of capture. Our data indicated no sex bias in their probability of being captured at lights. Males provided 86% of trackings, and 87% of trackings of birds flying over the breeding area were males. Males landed 118 times; females 13 times. Only males were found on the ground, by night and day, apparently unassociated with burrows (three with and ten without transmitters), but subsequently digging burrows (n = 8). Of 19 birds banded as fledglings up to 2000, males were first recaptured nearing 4 years old (at lights and on the ground) and a female nearing 6 years old (in burrow). Among 37 fledglings, the sex ratio was even. Nine tracked males occupied burrows, as did two females, but the latter were older recaptures (10+ and 25+ years old). It appears that only males claimed existing, or dug new, burrows. They then attracted a mate to the burrow by means unknown, but from among females frequenting an inshore courtship area near the colony, or occasionally flying over the colony, at night. Females established in burrows, but then losing their mate, were able to re-mate there, by calling from near the burrow or by attracting a mate in flight or from the postulated inshore courtship area. Both sexes sometimes took years to pair or re-mate, possibly reflecting the dearth of available mates. [source] Sublethal effects of chlorfluazuron on reproductivity and viability of Spodoptera litura (F. ) (Lep., Noctuidae)JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 5-6 2000F. Perveen To clarify the sublethal effects of chlorfluazuron on reproductivity and viability of common cutworm, Spodoptera litura, some experiments were conducted under laboratory conditions. The LD50 was found to be 12.0 ng/larva when evaluated up to pupation and 9.9 ng/larva up to adult emergence. At lethal dosages the development of different instars, moulting to pupae and emergence into adults were found to be more affected. Reduction in the body weight was also observed in the larvae and pupae when treated with a sublethal dose (LD30 : 3.75 ng/larva) and in the adults when treated with sublethal doses (LD10 : 1.00 ng/larva; LD30 : 3.75 ng/larva) as newly moulted fifth instar larvae of S. litura, although the number of matings per female and life span of adult females and males remained unaffected by the same treatments. When sublethal doses were applied only to females or only to males, or both sexes, the average fecundity reduction was up to 35,44%. When only females were treated with sublethal doses, fertility was reduced by 49,58%; when only males were treated fertility was reduced by 65,81% and when both sexes were treated, fertility was reduced by 68,83%. Hatchability was reduced by 22,26% when only females were treated, by 44,66% when only males were treated and by 45,72% when both sexes were treated with LD10 or LD30 doses as newly moulted fifth instars. The results from these observations suggest that the fecundity was reduced to a similar degree when only females or only males or both sexes were treated with LD10 or LD30 doses as newly moulted fifth instars. However the fertility and hatchability were affected more when only males were treated with LD10 and much more when treated with LD30. Currently, work is in progress to find out the main reasons for the sublethal effects of chlorfluazuron on reproductivity and viability. [source] Molecular cloning and expression analysis of Fshr and Lhr in relation to Fshb and Lhb subunits during the period of temperature-dependent sex determination in pejerrey Odontesthes bonariensisMOLECULAR REPRODUCTION & DEVELOPMENT, Issue 6 2010Takahiro Shinoda In this study, we cloned and characterized the follicle stimulating hormone receptor (Fshr) and luteinizing hormone receptor (Lhr) cDNAs of pejerrey Odontesthes bonariensis, a species with temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD), and analyzed their expression in relation to Fshb and Lhb subunits during gonadogenesis at temperatures producing only females (17°C, FPT), both sexes (25°C, MixPT), and only males (29°C, MPT). The pejerrey Fshr cDNA had 3,069,bp for a mature protein of 694 amino acids (aa) and a signal peptide of 22 aa; the Lhr cDNA had 2,936,bp for a mature protein of 676 aa and a signal peptide of 25 aa. With the exception of Lhr in fish at the MPT, all genes showed significant increases and/or peaks of expression before histological differentiation of the gonads regardless of temperature. Larvae at the FPT had lower Fshb and Lhb but higher Lhr expression during the TSD period than those at the MPT; a clear pattern could not be ascertained for Fshr. At the MixPT, Fshb, Lhb, and Lhr mRNA increased in approximately half of the fish during TSD and sex differentiation and the sex ratio was 55.2% male. Based on the above results, it is suggested that animals with high Fshb and Lhb and low Lhr values represent putative males. These evidences, together with other studies, suggest that temperature may signal through the pituitary (differential expression of Fshb and Lhb) down to the gonads (differential expression of Lhr), probably affecting the regulation of steroidogenesis during the TSD process of pejerrey. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 77: 521,532, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Suboptimal thermoregulation in male adders (Vipera berus) after hibernation imposed by spermiogenesisBIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2007GÁBOR HERCZEG In ectotherms, the main behavioural option for thermoregulation is the adjustment of daily and seasonal activity to the thermal quality of the environment. While active, ectotherms thermoregulate by shuttling in between thermally differing microhabitat patches. Here, we focused on the question of whether other behavioural or physiological processes could force ectotherms to maintain activity during thermally unfavourable periods, when accurate thermoregulation is impossible. Using laboratory experiments and field data we compared the thermoregulation of male adders (Vipera berus) between two periods in spring when (1) only males and (2) also females and juveniles had terminated their winter hibernation. We found that males thermoregulated actively both in the lab and in the field. Accurate thermoregulation was only possible during the second period because of the low thermal quality of the environment. Male adders maintained a lower mean body temperature in the field than in the laboratory within both periods, and in addition their body temperature during the first period was on average 4 °C lower than during the second period. The thermal qualities of the natural basking sites showed a similar pattern. We discuss the results in the context of a potential trade-off between spermiogenesis and thermoregulation, where the benefits of early spermiogenesis coupled with inaccurate thermoregulation are higher than the associated costs. The results support the contention that the earlier spring emergence of the male compared with female adders is explainable by natural selection favouring early initiation of spermiogenesis, and hence sex differences in phenology. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2007, 92, 19,27. [source] |