AI Article Synopsis

  • Testosterone influences both male and female behavior, including aggression and sexual activity, and levels can change seasonally in females.
  • A study on degus examined the effects of season, anogenital distance (a sign of prenatal androgen exposure), and group composition on female testosterone levels across a 10-year period.
  • Findings showed that female testosterone levels peak during the offspring-rearing season and are linked to the number and AGD of male group members, suggesting that social interactions play a role in hormonal regulation, with similarities in testosterone levels between sexes noted.

Article Abstract

Testosterone is known as a "male" hormone; however, females also synthetize testosterone, which influences female sexual and aggressive behavior. In female vertebrates, as in males, testosterone levels can vary seasonally. However, female testosterone levels may also be related with female anogenital distance (AGD) length phenotype (a proxy of prenatal androgen exposure), and the social group environment. We used data from a long-term rodent study (2009-2019) in a natural population of degus (Octodon degus) to examine the potential associations between female serum testosterone levels, season, female AGD phenotype, and social group composition. We quantified female serum testosterone levels during the mating and offspring rearing seasons, and we determined the number of females and males in social groups, as well the composition of groups, in terms of the AGD of the female and male group mates. Our results indicate that female testosterone levels vary with season, being highest during the offspring rearing season. Additionally, female testosterone levels were associated with the number of male group-members and the AGD of male group-members but were not associated with female social environment and focal female AGD phenotype. Together, our results suggest that female testosterone levels are sensitive to intersexual interactions. Our results also reveal that female and male testosterone levels do not differ between the sexes, a finding previously reported only in rock hyraxes. We discuss how the complex social system of degus could be driving this physiological similarity between the sexes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yhbeh.2024.105486DOI Listing

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