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Oecologia. 2001 Jul;128(2):164-171. doi: 10.1007/s004420100642. Epub 2001 Jul 01.

Functional significance of variation in egg-yolk androgens in the American coot.

Oecologia

Wendy L Reed, Carol M Vleck

Affiliations

  1. Department of Zoology and Genetics, Iowa State University, 50011, Ames, IA, USA.

PMID: 28547464 DOI: 10.1007/s004420100642

Abstract

Maternally derived hormones in cleidoic eggs have been implicated in mediating growth, behavior, and social interactions among offspring. Given these widespread and significant effects, hormonal investments have the potential to greatly influence fitness of offspring. Intraspecific variation can exist at three levels (within individual eggs, among eggs within clutches, and among eggs from different females), each of which has different implications for offspring. We characterized all three levels of variation in maternally derived androgens (testosterone and androstenedione) present in yolks of American coot eggs. We found no variation in testosterone levels within eggs which suggests that embryos are exposed to constant androgen levels during development, and that field-based yolk biopsies are an appropriate way to sample eggs for this species. Within clutches, early-laid eggs had higher androgen levels than late-laid eggs, and this pattern may exacerbate negative effects of hatching asynchrony on chicks from late-hatching eggs if androgens provide chicks with a behavioral or growth advantage over chicks from eggs with lower androgen levels. American coots lay large clutches, and unequal resource allocation among offspring may be the optimal strategy for females with access to limited resources. Most of the variation in androgen levels occurred among eggs from different females. Females nesting on ponds with two other pairs laid eggs with significantly higher androgen levels than females living on ponds with fewer pairs. This suggests that increased territory defense behaviors influence the levels of androgens allocated to eggs and may be one mechanism underlying density-dependent effects on reproduction.

Keywords: Density-dependent effects; Egg-yolk androgens; Hatching asynchrony; Intraspecific variation; Maternal effects

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