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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Morphology and endocrinology were studied in two populations of the peacock blenny Salaria pavo, with
different regimes of sexual selection imposed by differences in nest site availability. The peacock blenny is a
small, sexually dimorphic benthic fish that presents exclusive paternal care of the clutch and inhabits rocky
shores of the Mediterranean and adjacent Atlantic areas. In a population from the Gulf of Trieste (Northern
Adriatic sea) inhabiting rocky shores where nest sites are abundant, male–male competition for nests is low,
males court females and a low frequency of alternative reproductive tactics (small, parasitic femalemimicking
sneaker males that change tactic into nest holders in subsequent breeding seasons) occurs.
Conversely at Ria Formosa, a coastal lagoon in Southern Portugal, where nest sites are scarce and highly
aggregated, male–male competition for nests is very high, there is sex-role reversal with female courtship
and a high frequency of alternative reproductive tactics is observed. Concomitantly, at Ria Formosa nest
holder males are larger and present more developed secondary sex characters and higher levels of 11KT than
at the Gulf of Trieste. However, the gonads of nest holders and parasitic males were larger in the Gulf of
Trieste population. Competition for nests at Ria Formosa seems to promote more developed secondary sex
characters in nest site scarcity conditions, while competition for females at the Gulf of Trieste seems to be
spurring sperm competition among males in populations where nest sites are more abundant. 11KT was thus
associated with the development and expression of secondary sex characters in contrasting environments.
These results exemplify how the modulation of behavioral plasticity and secondary sex characters by the
social environment can be mediated by androgens.
Description
Keywords
Courtship Morphology Modulation Androgens
Citation
Hormones and Behavior, 57, 192-197