4.3 Article

Yolk corticosterone and progesterone levels in Greater Rhea (Rhea americana) eggs vary in a changing social environment

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jez.2602

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changing social environment; maternal effects; yolk corticosterone; yolk progesterone

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  1. Secretaria de Ciencia y Tecnologia of the Universidad Nacional de Cordoba (SECyTUNC)
  2. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica de Argentina (FONCYT) [1170]
  3. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET)

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The study found that female Greater Rheas can adjust yolk hormone deposition in response to changes in their social environment, altering hormone levels in their plasma and influencing the physiology and behavior of their chicks.
Maternal hormones in avian egg yolks may signal and prepare offspring for the prevailing conditions. However, this adjustment requires some degree of flexibility in regulating yolk hormone deposition. The Greater Rhea (Rhea americana) has a particular mating system that combines mixed polygyny and polyandry, communal nesting, and exclusive paternal care of chicks. In this species, we previously found that yolk hormone deposition varies among eggs of different captive populations and could influence chicks' physiology and behavior. However, it is still unknown whether females can modify yolk hormone deposition in a changing social environment. Using a captive population of Greater Rheas, in this study, we quantified yolk hormone levels before and after a reduction in the number of females present in the population. We found that females deposited on average higher yolk corticosterone and lower yolk progesterone after the change in their social environment. Since corticosterone deposited into the yolk comes exclusively from the female's plasma, our results suggest that females had, on average, higher plasma corticosterone levels. The change in the number of females may increase the events of male-male competitions, courtships, and matings, leading to an increase of corticosterone in the females' plasma and then into their eggs. Since we previously found that higher yolk corticosterone and lower yolk progesterone were associated with the production of chicks that have an attenuated stress response, the present study results suggest that yolk hormone deposition is mediated by flexible mechanisms that could adjust development to the prevailing conditions.

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