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Androgen control of immunocompetence in the male house finch, Carpodacus mexicanus Müller (2005)

by P Deviche, L Cortez
Venue:J. Exp. Biol
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Do male ornaments signal immunity in the common yellowthroat?

by unknown authors
"... Male ornaments may advertise genetic benefits to females choosing mates. These benefits may come in the form of genes for resistance to parasites and disease. Thus, females that prefer more ornamented males as mates may receive genes for enhanced immune system function for their offspring. The commo ..."
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Male ornaments may advertise genetic benefits to females choosing mates. These benefits may come in the form of genes for resistance to parasites and disease. Thus, females that prefer more ornamented males as mates may receive genes for enhanced immune system function for their offspring. The common yellowthroat (Geothlypis trichas) is the only species to date in which a male plumage ornament (size of the black facial mask) is known to be related to extrapair mating, and extrapair young are more immunocompetent than their within-pair half-sibs (at least in colder years). To investigate whether male mask size signals superior immune function, we examined male ornaments (mask and bib size and color) in relation to measures of overall health (hematocrit) and immune system function (plasma immunoglobulin G [IgG] concentration and cutaneous immune activity). We also investigated the role that testosterone may play in mediating the relationship between ornaments and immunity. Male mask size was correlated positively with IgG level, suggesting that male mask size may indicate humoral immunity. However, mask size was correlated negatively with hematocrit and cutaneous immune activity (our measure of nestling immuno-competence). Bib size and color were not related to these indices of immune function or health. Plasma testosterone level was neither related to immune function or health nor to the expression of male ornaments. These results suggest that there might be a trade-off between immune system components, as well as between immunity and the production or advertise-ment of male ornaments. Key words: genetic benefits, immune system, mate choice, secondary sexual traits, sexual selection, testosterone. [Behav Ecol 19:54–60 (2008)]
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...rations of all samples were within the sensitivity range of the assay. Validation tests of this commercial immunoassay have demonstrated accurate measures of T in house finches (Carpodacus mexicanus, =-=Deviche and Cortez 2005-=-). T concentrations were natural log transformed to achieve a normal distribution. Statistical analysis We used multiple regression to test the prediction that male ornaments were related to immune sy...

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by Melissa A. Hillegass, Jane M. Waterman, James D. Roth
"... doi:10.1093/beheco/arn070 ..."
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doi:10.1093/beheco/arn070
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...ehr and Kokko 2006). In many species, sexual selection has produced males with larger body size (to compete for females), larger home ranges (to find females), or large ornaments (to attract females; =-=Deviche and Cortez 2005-=-; Perez-Orella and Schulte-Hostedde 2005; Deviche and Parris 2006; Hoby et al. 2006; Nunn and Dokey 2006; Poulin and Lefebvre 2006). However, this heavy investment by males to compete for females may ...

Behavioral Ecology

by Melissa A. Hillegass, Jane M. Waterman, James D. Roth , 2008
"... doi:10.1093/beheco/arn070 ..."
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doi:10.1093/beheco/arn070
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...ehr and Kokko 2006). In many species, sexual selection has produced males with larger body size (to compete for females), larger home ranges (to find females), or large ornaments (to attract females; =-=Deviche and Cortez 2005-=-; Perez-Orella and Schulte-Hostedde 2005; Deviche and Parris 2006; Hoby et al. 2006; Nunn and Dokey 2006; Poulin and Lefebvre 2006). However, this heavy investment by males to compete for females may ...

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by unknown authors , 2006
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...nd total testosterone titers, but not free and total corticosterone titers. andinvestigated suggesting that this relationship is more complex than typically portrayed (e.g., Hasselquist et al., 1999; =-=Deviche and Cortez, 2005-=-). Previous work in male dark-eyed juncos, however, has demonstrated that increased testosterone suppresses cell-mediated and humoral immune function (Casto et al., 2001). Our results also demonstrate...

© 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 British

by Ecological Society, M. Mencuccini , 2007
"... Blackwell Publishing LtdBelow-ground hydraulic conductance is a function of environmental conditions and tree size in Scots pine J. MARTÍNEZ-VILALTA*†‡, E. KORAKAKI*, D. VANDERKLEIN* § and ..."
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Blackwell Publishing LtdBelow-ground hydraulic conductance is a function of environmental conditions and tree size in Scots pine J. MARTÍNEZ-VILALTA*†‡, E. KORAKAKI*, D. VANDERKLEIN* § and
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...tion (e.g. cell-mediated, humoral or leukocyte counts) has mixed empirical support (Casto, Nolan & Ketterson 2001; Robertsset al.s2004; Buchananset al.s2003; OwenAshley, Hasselquist & Wingfield 2004; =-=Deviche & Cortez 2005-=-; Greivesset al.s2006). Most evidence comes from studies that measure immune function after manipulating plasma testosterone. Many studies have produced evidence supporting the ICHH, yet a cautionary ...

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