Testosterone and melanin-based black plumage coloration:: a comparative study

被引:85
作者
Bokony, Veronika [1 ]
Garamszegi, Laszlo Zsolt [2 ]
Hirschenhauser, Katharina [3 ]
Liker, Andras [4 ]
机构
[1] Szent Istvan Univ, Dept Ecol, H-1078 Budapest, Hungary
[2] Univ Antwerp, Dept Biol, B-2610 Antwerp, Belgium
[3] Konrad Lorenz Res Stn, A-4645 Grunau, Austria
[4] Univ Pannonia, Dept Limnol, H-8201 Veszprem, Hungary
基金
匈牙利科学研究基金会;
关键词
androgens; hormonal control; melanin ornaments; sexual selection; status signals;
D O I
10.1007/s00265-008-0551-2
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Despite the functional significance of melanin-based plumage coloration in social and sexual signaling, the mechanisms controlling its information content are poorly understood. The T-regulation hypothesis proposes that melanin ornaments signal competitive abilities via the effects of testosterone (T) mediating both melanization and sexual/aggressive behaviors. Using the phylogenetic comparative approach, we tested whether frontal black melanization is associated with elevated T around the time of breeding plumage development across all bird species with available T-data. We found a context-dependent relationship between melanization and T, varying with the type of ornamentation (patchy or full-black) and with the presumed taxonomic distribution of the hormonal control of plumage dichromatism. Within two taxa in which male plumage development is assumed androgen-dependent (Charadriiformes, Corvida), evolutionary increases in male melanization, and melanin dichromatism correlated with increases in T in most analyses but not within the basal lineage (ratites, Galloanseriformes) with androgen-independent male plumage. Among Passeroidea with presumably genetically or luteinizing-hormone-based male plumage, melanization and its dichromatism correlated with T only in species with < 100% frontal melanization. These results were robust as we controlled for several confounding variables such as mating and parental behaviors. This study is the first to test and support the T-regulation hypothesis interspecifically, suggesting that among-species differences in melanization may have evolved in response to differences in circulating T in certain avian taxa. Our results imply that the extent of black ornamentation may serve as an honest indicator of male competitiveness in those species that evolved an appropriate hormonal basis (T dependence) for color production.
引用
收藏
页码:1229 / 1238
页数:10
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