4.4 Article

Repeatable intra-individual variation in plasma testosterone concentration and its sex-specific link to aggression in a social lizard

Journal

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 58, Issue 2, Pages 208-213

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2010.03.016

Keywords

Animal personalities; Egernia whitii; Hormonal repeatability; Reptile; Sex steroids

Funding

  1. Environmental Futures Network
  2. Joyce Vickery Research Fund
  3. Holsworth Wildlife Research Fund
  4. Ecological Society of Australia
  5. Winifred Scott Estate
  6. Australian Research Council
  7. NWO [825.07.004]

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Individual hormone profiles can be important generators of phenotypic variation. Despite this, work on the consequences of hormone profiles has traditionally ignored the large inter-individual variation within natural populations. However, recent research has advocated the need to explicitly consider this variation and address its consequences for selection. One of the key steps in this process is examining repeatability in hormone profiles and their links to behavioral traits under selection. In this study we show that individuals within a free-ranging population of the Australian lizard Egemia whitii exhibit temporal repeatability in their circulating baseline testosterone concentrations as well as their aggressive response towards conspecific intruders. Furthermore, we show significant, sex-specific links between testosterone and aggression. Specifically, testosterone and aggression is negatively linked in males, while there is no relationship in females. As conspecific aggression has significant consequences for fitness-related traits (parental care, mating strategies) in this species, inter-individual variation in testosterone concentrations, through their effects on aggression, could have important implications for individual fitness. We discuss the potential causes and consequences of hormonal repeatability as well as provide explanations for its sex-specific links with aggression. Specifically, we suggest that these patterns are the result of alternative hormonal pathways governing aggression within Egemia and may indicate a decoupling of aggression and testosterone across the sexes. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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