4.4 Article

Does the syrinx, a peripheral structure, constrain effects of sex steroids on behavioral sex reversal in adult canaries?

期刊

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
卷 154, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105394

关键词

Sex differences; Vocal behavior; Sexual differentiation; Behavioral constraints; Testosterone

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We found that the effects of testosterone on canary singing activity and brain song control nuclei volume are sexually differentiated, with females limited in their response to testosterone compared to males. In this study, we examined sex differences in trill production and performance, and discovered that the effects of testosterone on trill characteristics were stronger in males. Additionally, we observed that inter-individual differences in syrinx mass were related to specific trill features in males but not in females.
We previously confirmed that effects of testosterone (T) on singing activity and on the volume of brain song control nuclei are sexually differentiated in adult canaries: females are limited in their ability to respond to T as males do. Here we expand on these results by focusing on sex differences in the production and performance of trills, i.e., rapid repetitions of song elements. We analyzed >42,000 trills recorded over a period of 6 weeks from 3 groups of castrated males and 3 groups of photoregressed females that received SilasticTM implants filled with T, T plus estradiol or left empty as control. Effects of T on the number of trills, trill duration and percent of time spent trilling were all stronger in males than females. Irrespective of endocrine treatment, trill performance assessed by vocal deviations from the trill rate versus trill bandwidth trade-off was also higher in males than in females. Finally, inter-individual differences in syrinx mass were positively correlated with specific features of trills in males but not in females. Given that T increases syrinx mass and syrinx fiber diameter in males but not in females, these data indicate that sex differences in trilling behavior are related to sex differences in syrinx mass and syrinx muscle fiber diameter that cannot be fully suppressed by sex steroids in adulthood. Sexual differ-entiation of behavior thus reflects organization not only of the brain but also of peripheral structures.

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