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Widespread Accumulation of [(3)H]testosterone in the Spinal Cord of a Wild Bird with an Elaborate Courtship Display

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Specialty Science
Date 1999 Sep 1
PMID 10468625
Citations 9
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Abstract

Elaborate courtship displays are relatively common features of the masculine reproductive behavior in birds. However, little is known about their neural and hormonal control. One bird that performs such a display is the golden-collared manakin (Manacus vitellinus) of Panamanian forests. Adult males, but not females, perform a physically intense display requiring substantial neuromuscular control of the wings and legs. We tested the hypothesis that steroid sensitivity is a property of neurons in the manakin spinal cord. Males and females were captured from active courtship leks, treated with drugs to block steroidogenesis, injected with (3)H-labeled testosterone, and the spinal cords were removed and processed for autoradiography. Sex steroid-accumulating cells were widely distributed in the spinal cords in each of six males and in one of five females. Cells, including presumptive motoneurons, reached their highest density in the ventral horns of the cervical and lumbosacral enlargements, regions associated with motor control of the wings and legs. These results suggest that neurons in the adult manakin spinal cord can express sex-steroid receptors, but do so less in females than in males. This evidence for androgen sensitivity and sexual dimorphism in the adult avian spinal cord suggests that sex steroids may control diverse behaviors in male birds in part by acting directly on the spinal neural circuits.

Citing Articles

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Expression of 5α- and 5β-reductase in spinal cord and muscle of birds with different courtship repertoires.

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Increased androgenic sensitivity in the hind limb muscular system marks the evolution of a derived gestural display.

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Physiological control of elaborate male courtship: female choice for neuromuscular systems.

Fusani L, Barske J, Day L, Fuxjager M, Schlinger B Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2014; 46 Pt 4:534-46.

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