Jl. Ruiz-de-la-torre et X. Manteca, Effects of testosterone on aggressive behaviour after social mixing in male lambs, PHYSL BEHAV, 68(1-2), 1999, pp. 109-113
The aim of this article was to study the effects of testosterone administra
tion on the aggressive behaviour of male prepubertal lambs after mixing una
cquainted individuals. Forty male lambs from two different flocks (1 and 2)
, 20-22 kg body weight and 10-12 weeks old, were distributed into four grou
ps: C1 and C2 (control groups), and T1 and T2 (testosterone-treated groups)
. Groups C1 and T1 came from flock 1, while groups C2 and T2 came from floc
k 2. Animals in groups T1 and T2 were given 250 mg of testosterone enantate
intramuscularly on the first experimental day. Animals from the same flock
were kept as a group during the first 15 days; on Day 16, control animals
(C1 and C2) were moved into one pen and testosterone-treated animals (T1 an
d T2) into another one, where they were kept for 3 additional days. Aggress
ive interactions and hormone plasma levels were recorded both before and af
ter social mixing. Before social mixing, testosterone did not modify the fr
equency of aggressive interactions, while it increased the probability of a
n animal to receive an aggression. After social mixing testosterone-treated
animals initiated and received more aggressions than control animals. More
over, after social mixing, testosterone-treated animals directed their aggr
essions mainly towards unfamiliar animals, whereas control animals directed
theirs aggressions towards familiar and unfamiliar animals in the proporti
on expected by chance. It is suggested that the effects of testosterone on
aggressive behaviour are context dependent, and that testosterone increases
an animal's tendency to establish dominance relationships, rather than its
aggressiveness per se. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.