Aggression by a female rat cohabitating with a sterile male: Termination of pseudopregnancy does not abolish aggression
Female rats each cohabited with a sterile male for a 6-week period. At the end of that time, each female was assessed for aggressiveness toward an unfamiliar female intruder once each week for 3 weeks. Those females displaying a high level of aggression had their male cagemate changed. For half of t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiology & behavior 1991-09, Vol.50 (3), p.519-523 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Female rats each cohabited with a sterile male for a 6-week period. At the end of that time, each female was assessed for aggressiveness toward an unfamiliar female intruder once each week for 3 weeks. Those females displaying a high level of aggression had their male cagemate changed. For half of the females, the new male cagemate was a castrated male with a testosterone implant. For the other half, the new cagemate was a castrated male without a testosterone implant. Replacement males had been subjected to surgery 9 weeks previously. There were no differences in the aggressiveness of females of the two groups on any of 3 subsequent weekly tests of aggression. In a 3-h evaluation of male sexual behavior, none of the 9 castrated males without testosterone replacement displayed sexual activity with an estrogen/progesterone primed ovariectomized female, but 6 of 9 males with testosterone replacement did. Reanalysis of the aggression data comparing the females whose males had no testosterone replacement and females housed with the 6 males that were sexually active also revealed no differences in aggression over the 21-day test period. Since pseudopregnancy is known to last 13 days, these results indicate that the continuous presence of pseudopregnancy is not required for maintenance of aggression by a female cohabiting with a sterile male. |
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ISSN: | 0031-9384 1873-507X |
DOI: | 10.1016/0031-9384(91)90539-Z |