AGGRESSION BY A FEMALE RAT COHABITATING WITH A STERILE MALE - TERMINATION OF PSEUDOPREGNANCY DOES NOT ABOLISH AGGRESSION

被引:14
作者
ALBERT, DJ [1 ]
JONIK, RH [1 ]
WATSON, NV [1 ]
MOE, IV [1 ]
WALSH, ML [1 ]
机构
[1] SIMON FRASER UNIV,SCH KINESIOL,BURNABY V5A 1S6,BC,CANADA
关键词
AGGRESSION; MATERNAL AGGRESSION; PSEUDOPREGNANCY;
D O I
10.1016/0031-9384(91)90539-Z
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
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.
引用
收藏
页码:519 / 523
页数:5
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]  
ALBERT DJ, 1990, PSYCHOBIOLOGY, V18, P215
[2]   FEMALE RATS IN A COMPETITIVE SITUATION - MEDIAL HYPOTHALAMIC-LESIONS INCREASE AND OVARIECTOMY DECREASES SUCCESS AND AGGRESSION [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
PETROVIC, DM ;
WALSH, ML .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1989, 46 (03) :379-386
[3]   OVARIECTOMY ATTENUATES AGGRESSION BY FEMALE RATS COHABITING WITH SEXUALLY ACTIVE STERILE MALES [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
PETROVIC, DM ;
WALSH, ML .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1989, 45 (02) :225-228
[4]   HORMONE-DEPENDENT AGGRESSION IN THE FEMALE RAT - TESTOSTERONE PLUS ESTRADIOL IMPLANTS PREVENT THE DECLINE IN AGGRESSION FOLLOWING OVARIECTOMY [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
JONIK, RH ;
WALSH, ML .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1991, 49 (04) :673-677
[5]   HORMONE-DEPENDENT AGGRESSION IN FEMALE RATS - TESTOSTERONE IMPLANTS ATTENUATE THE DECLINE IN AGGRESSION FOLLOWING OVARIECTOMY [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
JONIK, RH ;
WALSH, ML .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1990, 47 (04) :659-664
[6]   ACTIVATION OF AGGRESSION IN FEMALE RATS BY NORMAL MALES AND BY CASTRATED MALES WITH TESTOSTERONE IMPLANTS [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
DYSON, EM ;
PETROVIC, DM ;
WALSH, ML .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1988, 44 (01) :9-13
[7]   COHABITATION WITH A FEMALE ACTIVATES TESTOSTERONE-DEPENDENT SOCIAL AGGRESSION IN MALE-RATS INDEPENDENTLY OF CHANGES IN SERUM TESTOSTERONE CONCENTRATION [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
DYSON, EM ;
WALSH, ML ;
PETROVIC, DM .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1988, 44 (06) :735-740
[8]   AGGRESSION BY OVARIECTOMIZED FEMALE RATS - COMBINED TESTOSTERONE ESTROGEN IMPLANTS SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT OF HORMONE-DEPENDENT AGGRESSION [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
JONIK, RH ;
WALSH, ML .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1990, 47 (05) :825-830
[9]   MATERNAL AGGRESSION AND INTERMALE SOCIAL AGGRESSION - A BEHAVIORAL-COMPARISON [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
WALSH, ML ;
ZALYS, C ;
DYSON, EM .
BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES, 1987, 14 (03) :267-275
[10]   DEFENSIVE AGGRESSION TOWARD AN EXPERIMENTER - NO DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MALES AND FEMALES FOLLOWING SEPTAL, MEDIAL ACCUMBENS, OR MEDIAL HYPOTHALAMIC-LESIONS IN RATS [J].
ALBERT, DJ ;
WALSH, ML ;
ZALYS, C ;
DYSON, E .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1986, 38 (01) :11-14