Androgens are classically thought of as the sex steroids controlling male reproduction. However, in recent years evidence has accumulated showing that androgens can also be affected by the interactions between conspecifics, suggesting reciprocal interactions between androgens and behaviour. These results have been interpreted as an adaptation for individuals to adjust their agonistic motivation and to cope with changes in their social environment. Thus, male–male interactions would stimulate the production of androgens, and the levels of androgens would be a function of the stability of its social environment [‘challenge hypothesis’, Gen. Comp. Endocrinol. 56 (1984) 417]. Here the available data on social modulation of androgen levels in ma...
We tested whether subordinate helper males of the Lake Tanganyika cooperatively breeding cichlid Neo...
Social interactions among the animals in a group affect their subsequent behaviour, manifesting as d...
The challenge hypothesis (Wingfield et al. 1990, American Naturalist, 136, 829–846) predicts varying...
Androgens are classically thought of as the sex steroids controlling male reproduction. However, in ...
Androgens are classically thought of as the sex steroids controlling male reproduction. However, in ...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
Androgens are known to respond to social challenges and to control the expression of social behavior...
The relationship between urinary concentrations (free + sulfates + glucuronides) of the steroids te...
Androgens are known to respond to social challenges and to control the expression of social behavior...
Androgens, traditionally viewed as hormones that regulate secondary sexual characteristics and repro...
The Mozambique tilapia, Oreachrzlrnis rnossambicus, is used as a case study to illustrate different ...
The relationship between androgen levels and social behaviours of males of the cichlid fish Oreochr...
In many territorial species androgens respond to social interactions. This response has been interp...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
It has been hypothesized that androgens respond to the social interactions as a way to adjust the be...
We tested whether subordinate helper males of the Lake Tanganyika cooperatively breeding cichlid Neo...
Social interactions among the animals in a group affect their subsequent behaviour, manifesting as d...
The challenge hypothesis (Wingfield et al. 1990, American Naturalist, 136, 829–846) predicts varying...
Androgens are classically thought of as the sex steroids controlling male reproduction. However, in ...
Androgens are classically thought of as the sex steroids controlling male reproduction. However, in ...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
Androgens are known to respond to social challenges and to control the expression of social behavior...
The relationship between urinary concentrations (free + sulfates + glucuronides) of the steroids te...
Androgens are known to respond to social challenges and to control the expression of social behavior...
Androgens, traditionally viewed as hormones that regulate secondary sexual characteristics and repro...
The Mozambique tilapia, Oreachrzlrnis rnossambicus, is used as a case study to illustrate different ...
The relationship between androgen levels and social behaviours of males of the cichlid fish Oreochr...
In many territorial species androgens respond to social interactions. This response has been interp...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
It has been hypothesized that androgens respond to the social interactions as a way to adjust the be...
We tested whether subordinate helper males of the Lake Tanganyika cooperatively breeding cichlid Neo...
Social interactions among the animals in a group affect their subsequent behaviour, manifesting as d...
The challenge hypothesis (Wingfield et al. 1990, American Naturalist, 136, 829–846) predicts varying...