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Female canaries produce eggs with greater amounts of testosterone when exposed to preferred male song
Authors:Gil Diego  Leboucher Gérard  Lacroix André  Cue Roger  Kreutzer Michel
Institution:Laboratoire d'Ethologie et Cognition Comparées, Université Paris X Nanterre, 92000 Nanterre, France. dgil@mncn.csic.es
Abstract:Male birdsong has a great influence in the stimulation of female reproduction. However, female physiological responsiveness to song may depend on the degree of complexity of male song. This is expected because females of iteroparous organisms may increase their fitness by matching their reproductive investment to the predicted value of each reproductive attempt. To the extent that the expression of male ornaments is a signal of male quality, we expect females to increase their investment when paired to highly ornamented males. However, female investment may be cryptic and difficult to detect, such as androgen content in the eggs. In this study, we exposed female canaries (Serinus canaria) to attractive and unattractive song repertoires using a crossover design. As predicted, females invested greater concentrations of testosterone in their eggs when exposed to attractive repertoires than when exposed to unattractive repertoires. This implies that song repertoires convey important information about the reproductive value of a given male and suggests that testosterone deposition in egg yolk may be costly.
Keywords:Yolk androgens  Testosterone  Differential allocation  Cryptic female choice  Song repertoire  Serinus canaria
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