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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Blenniid fish exhibit a polygynandric mating system with parental
care restricted to males. Nest-holder males defend a
breeding territory centered on their nest, usually a crevice or
hole in a rocky substrate, to which they attract females to
spawn. Females, on the other hand, must search for nests in
order to spawn and usually are the choosy sex, producing
several sequential egg batches and broods during the breeding
season. Therefore, male blennies are more site-attached
than females. This situation offers an opportunity to investigate
potential neural correlates of intraspecific differences in
selective pressures for different spatial abilities in these species.
Since the dorsolateral telencephalon has been considered
a teleost homologue of the mammalian hippocampus,
we predicted that the spatial abilities required for females to
locate and return accurately to nests of males may have produced
a sex difference in the size of the telencephalic nuclei
involved in spatial abilities, biased towards females. To
test this hypothesis, we assessed the home ranges and measured
the size of the dorsolateral telencephalon of both sexes during the breeding season in two blenniid species, the
shanny (Lipophrys pholis) and the Azorean rock-pool blenny
(Parablennius parvicornis) . We chose these two species because
they differ in the degree of chemical communication
they use, and this could also lead to differences in telencephalic
areas. As predicted, in both species females present
considerably larger home ranges paralleled by larger dorsolateral
ventral telencephalic nuclei (DLv) than males. Other
telencephalic nuclei that were measured did not show any
sex difference in size. These results suggest that the DLv is
involved in spatial abilities in blenniid fish and that sexual
selection may be promoting this divergence as already described
for mammals and birds.
Description
Keywords
Blennies Spatial behavior Sexual dimorphism Hippocampal pallium Teleost fish
Citation
Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 77, 55-64
Publisher
S. Karger AG