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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Studies testing the ‘‘immunocompetence
handicap hypothesis’’ have focussed on the immunosuppressive
effects of androgens. Several recent studies have
reported that mounting a humoral immune response might
also result in a decrease in circulating androgen levels via
a ‘‘negative feedback’’ on the hypothalamus–pituitary–
gonadal axis (HPG). The aim of this correlative study was
to analyse these immunosuppressive and HPG-suppressive
interactions in reproductively active males of the peafowl.
We collected blood samples of free living birds before and
after challenging the immune system with a non-pathogenic
antigen (sheep erythrocytes), and analysed immune
parameters and plasma levels of the two main androgens in
birds, testosterone and dihydrotestosterone. Males displaying
larger versions of the main secondary sexual trait,
the long and conspicuously ornamented train, tended to
have higher androgen levels and significantly lower circulating
levels of leukocytes, indicating that exaggerated
ornaments might signal properties of the endocrine and
immune system. Actual circulating levels of androgens did
not correlate with the plasma levels of leukocytes and the
antibody response to SRBC. However, changes in plasma
levels of both androgens showed negative correlation with
both leukocytes (P\0.1) and SRBC responses (P\0.05).
The data therefore support the prediction that activity of
the immune system is HPG-suppressive. Such suppression has been proposed to be especially costly during the
reproductive season, during which androgens facilitate the
expression of exaggerated traits that play an important role
in sexual competition.
Description
Keywords
Peacock Sexual traits Immunocompetence Testosterone Dihydrotestosterone SRBC Heterophil–lymphocyte ratio
Citation
Journal of Ethology, 27 (2), 209-214