SENSITIVITY TO TESTOSTERONE VARIES WITH STRAIN, SEX, AND SITE OF ACTION IN CHICKENS

Citation
K. Astiningsih et Lj. Rogers, SENSITIVITY TO TESTOSTERONE VARIES WITH STRAIN, SEX, AND SITE OF ACTION IN CHICKENS, Physiology & behavior, 59(6), 1996, pp. 1085-1091
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Biological","Behavioral Sciences",Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00319384
Volume
59
Issue
6
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1085 - 1091
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-9384(1996)59:6<1085:STTVWS>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Day-old chicks (cockerels and pullers) of two strains of chicken (a co mmercial breed and strain of feral fowl) were treated intramuscularly with 25 mg/0.1 mi of testosterone oenanthate on day 1 posthatching. Co ntrols received 0.1 ml of the vehicle. Attack and copulatory behavior were scored from days 7 to 14 using standard hand-thrust tests, which rank the responses from 1 to 10. The sizes of the comb and testes were also measured. All measures showed strain and sex differences. Copula tion and attack scores were highest in males of the feral strain. Even untreated males of the feral strain had high scores, and these were f urther elevated by the testosterone treatment. In fact, the attack sco res of feral males were marginally higher than those of the males of t he commercial strain treated with testosterone. Testosterone treatment of the feral females also elevated attack and copulation to a much gr eater extent than in the commercial strain. Opposite effects occurred for the development of the comb. Comb volume, absolute and adjusted fo r body weight, was much greater in treated chicks of the commercial st rain than in those of the feral strain. These results indicate that ch icks of the feral strain may have more central and fewer peripheral re ceptors for testosterone or that their receptors for testosterone are more sensitive than those of the commercial strain. Alternatively, the re may be strain, as well as sex, differences in the metabolism of tes tosterone.