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Jessop, T. S., FitzSimmons, N. N., Limpus, C. J., & Whittier, J. M. (1999). Interactions between behavior and plasma steroids within the scramble mating system of the promiscuous green turtle, chelonia mydas. Hormones and Behavior, 36(2), 86–97. 
Added by: Admin (22 Feb 2009 11:56:20 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
BibTeX citation key: Jessop1999
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Categories: General
Keywords: Chelonia, Chelonia mydas, Cheloniidae, Physiologie = physiology, Schildkröten = turtles + tortoises, Stress = stress, Verhalten = ethology
Creators: FitzSimmons, Jessop, Limpus, Whittier
Collection: Hormones and Behavior
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Abstract     
We measured plasma androgen (combined testosterone and 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone) (A) and corticosterone (B) in the promiscuous green turtle (Chelonia mydas) during courtship in the southern Great Barrier Reef. This study examined if reproductive behaviors and intermale aggression induced behavioral androgen and adrenocortical responses in reproductively active male and female green turtles. Associations between reproductive behavior and plasma steroids were investigated in green turtles across the population and within individuals. Levels across a range of both asocial and social behaviors were compared including (a) free swimming behavior; (b) initial courtship interactions; (c) mounted behavior (male and female turtles involved in copulatory activities); (d) intermale aggression (rival males that physically competed with another male turtle or mounted males recipient to these aggressive interactions); and (e) extensive courtship damage (male turtles that had accumulated excessive courtship damage from rival males). Behavioral androgen responses were detected in male turtles, in that plasma A was observed to increase with both attendant and mounted behavior. Male turtles who had been subjected to intermale aggression or who had accumulated severe courtship damage exhibited significantly lower plasma A than their respective controls. No pronounced adrenocortical response was observed after either intermale aggression or accumulation of extensive courtship damage. Female turtles exhibited a significant increase in plasma B during swimming versus mounted behavior, but no change in plasma A. We discuss our results in terms of how scramble polygamy might influence behavioral androgen interactions differently from more typical combative and territorial forms of male polygamy.
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