Dk. Hews et Mc. Moore, INFLUENCE OF ANDROGENS ON DIFFERENTIATION OF SECONDARY SEX CHARACTERSIN TREE LIZARDS, UROSAURUS-ORNATUS, General and comparative endocrinology, 97(1), 1995, pp. 86-102
Vertebrates species vary in the degree to which the sexes differ in th
eir expression of secondary sex characters, which can be expressed in
one sex but not the other, fully expressed in both sexes, or expressed
to different degrees in the two sexes. Sex steroid hormones contribut
e to the development of sex differences, either through action early i
n life (organization), following sexual maturation (activation), or bo
th. However, relatively little is known about the contributions of sex
steroid hormones to species-level variation in sexual dimorphism. We
began to address this by assessing in tree lizards, Urosaurus ornatus,
the effects of testosterone (T) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) on expr
ession of the male-typical traits: femoral pore secretions, accessory
sex tissues, patches of ventrolateral blue, intensity and hue of throa
t color, and body size. We administered long-lasting hormone implants
of these androgens to intact or ovariectomized adult females, intact h
atchling females, and intact hatchling males to determine the relative
contribution of organizational and activational influences of androge
ns on sexual differentiation of these traits. Waxy femoral pore secret
ions and full intensity of the orange background color of the throat f
an (dewlap) required only activation and both androgens were equally e
ffective. Both androgens caused hypertrophy of accessory tissues assoc
iated with the hemipenes, but only in hatchling males. Full expression
of ventrolateral blue patches required organization by DHT. Androgens
had complex organizational actions on growth. In the doses used in th
e experiment, DHT inhibited body-length growth but not mass growth of
hatchling males. Only T inhibited the growth (length and mass) of hatc
hling females. Because earlier work found that castration also reduced
the growth of hatchling males, the organizational effects of androgen
on growth might be dose-related. Results for hormonal control of dewl
ap type were complex. In this population dewlap color is solid orange
in females, but polymorphic in males with 50% expressing solid orange
(0) and 50% orange-blue (orange with a central blue patch, OB). These
color morphs represent permanent male alternatives: OB males are terri
torial and more aggressive than O males who do not defend territories.
Results of the hormone manipulations are most consistent with the int
erpretation that dewlap morph type requires both organization and acti
vation by androgen. T appears to be more important in organizing morph
differences, whereas DHT appears to be more important in activating e
xpression of underlying morph differences. Females only expressed male
-typical OB dewlaps when given DHT, and only about 50% did so. (C) 199
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