Publications by authors named "Duyse E"

Although several studies have suggested that behavioural measures may be more comprehensive than other biomarkers for indicating an organism's health or welfare, this has rarely been investigated in free-living terrestrial vertebrates. Here we examine the expression of dawn singing behaviour in a free-living small songbird in relation to environmental pollution. We compared the singing behaviour of male great tits Parus major inhabiting an area extremely polluted with heavy metals with that of males inhabiting areas of low(er) pollution (at 4 and 20 km distance from the pollution source).

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Gonadal steroids, most importantly testosterone (T), are considered to be a major factor in the expression of adult song behavior in temperate-zone songbirds. The action of T within specific brain regions involved in the regulation of song may occur either directly, or through its androgenic or estrogenic metabolites. In the present study, we tested steroid-dependence of great tit dawn song by blocking both known pathways of T action by simultaneous implantation of flutamide, an anti-androgen, and ATD, an aromatase inhibitor.

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The annual course of plasma testosterone (T) and song activity during the day was examined in free-living male great tits (Parus major) in a single year and in a single population. We provide the first study in this species investigating plasma T during the breeding season among and within breeding stages. As expected for a temperate-zone monogamous species, plasma T levels showed a pronounced peak in March at the start of the breeding season and fast decreasing levels thereafter to moderate levels in the parental phase.

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Several studies have shown that elevated levels of certain heavy metals may affect the behavior of birds and mammals. However, most of these studies were carried out under controlled laboratory conditions; results from free-living populations are scarce. In this study we examined the possible effects of exposure to high heavy metal concentrations on the aggressive behavior of resident great tit (Parus major) males by means of simulated territorial intrusion experiments during the egg-laying and incubation period at a highly polluted and a reference site.

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As outlined in the trade-off hypothesis of testosterone (T) secretion, fluctuations in T during the breeding season might reflect how males allocate their time and energy to competitive behaviors for mates and territories, associated with high T levels, and parental activities, associated with low T levels. In the present study, great tit, Parus major, males were implanted with T-filled or empty silastic capsules at the start of the breeding season and the behavior of these two male categories was compared during the entire breeding season. As a measure of competitive behavior we looked at song behavior and territorial responsiveness to a male decoy, during the three main stages of the breeding period (the egg-laying, incubation, and nestling stages).

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The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis proposes that the expression of secondary sexual characteristics is positively related to testosterone levels, but that elevated testosterone levels also impose costs from immune suppression. Hence, testosterone-dependent characteristics should accurately reflect male quality because only high-quality males are able to invest in large sexual characteristics without detrimental effects upon their own immune system. Most studies to date have focused on the role of testosterone in the expression of male ornaments and on the possible immunosuppressant effects of androgens in males.

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