AI Article Synopsis

  • In black-capped chickadees, neuroanatomical changes related to breeding, such as the growth of vocal control nuclei, occur after reproductive hormone levels increase, but research shows mixed results in wild birds.
  • Researchers studied chickadees captured in different seasons (spring, summer, winter) and found that although early spring birds had low gonadal activity, they still exhibited a larger Area X nucleus compared to winter birds.
  • Comparing early spring chickadees to those captured later in breeding season revealed that while Area X's size remained stable, the HVC nucleus grew significantly in breeding males, suggesting that changes in vocal control may precede hormonal shifts associated with breeding.

Article Abstract

In temperate-zone songbirds, the neuroanatomical changes which occur in advance of breeding, including the growth of nuclei of the vocal control system, are believed to occur downstream of gonadal recrudescence. However, evidence from wild birds is mixed. Here, we captured black-capped chickadees from the wild in early spring (March-April), summer (August-September), and winter (December-January); in addition to measuring the volumes of two vocal control nuclei (Area X and HVC), we also quantified two indicators of reproductive state (gonads and circulating gonadal steroids). Most birds captured in early spring had regressed gonads and low levels of circulating gonadal steroids, indicating these birds were not yet in full breeding condition. However, these early spring birds still had a significantly larger Area X than winter birds, while HVC did not differ in size across groups. Using data from a previously published seasonal study of black-capped chickadees (Phillmore et al., Developmental Neurobiology, 2015;75:203-216), we then compared Area X and HVC volumes from our early spring group to a breeding group of chickadees captured 3-4 weeks later in the spring. While Area X volume did not differ between the studies, breeding males in Phillmore et al. (2015) had a significantly larger HVC. Taken together, this suggests that the vernal growth of Area X occurs ahead of HVC in black-capped chickadees, and that the overall vernal changes in the vocal control system occur at least partially in advance of the breeding-associated upregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jne.13375DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

vocal control
16
black-capped chickadees
16
early spring
16
area hvc
12
vernal growth
8
gonadal recrudescence
8
control system
8
circulating gonadal
8
gonadal steroids
8
area
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!