Male androgen responses to social challenges have been predicted to vary with mating system, male–male aggressiveness, and the degree of paternal investment in birds (“challenge hypothesis,” Am. Nat. 136 (1990), 829). This study focused on the interspecific predictions of the challenge hypothesis. Comparative methods were used to control for effects of the phylogenetic relatedness among the sampled species. Male androgen data of 84 bird species were collected from literature records on seasonal androgen patterns. From these, the androgen responsiveness (AR) was calculated as described in the original challenge hypothesis (i.e., maximum physiological level/breeding baseline). Scatterplots of AR versus mating strategy, male–male aggressi...
Several studies show that avian females prefer males based on their secondary sexual ornaments and d...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opp...
The challenge hypothesis (Wingfield et al. 1990, American Naturalist, 136, 829–846) predicts varying...
In male birds, the responsiveness of androgens to sexual and territorial behaviour is predicted to v...
Androgen levels show strong patterns throughout the year in male vertebrates and play an important r...
Males may face a trade-off between caring for offspring and pursuing additional matings. In birds, t...
A number of investigations in recent years have shown that seasonal profiles of testosterone (T) lev...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that male vertebrates can respond to social challenges, such as ...
The increase or decrease in yolk androgens over the laying sequence of a clutch in birds may mitigat...
Parental care provided by males occurs in a diverse array of animals and there are large differences...
Testosterone plays an important role in territorial behavior of many male vertebrates and the Challe...
High investment in mating and parental effort in male birds are considered mutually exclusive, as te...
Males and females are in conflict over parental care, as it would be favourable for one parent to sh...
A long-standing tenet of evolutionary endocrinology states that testosterone mediates the life-histo...
Several studies show that avian females prefer males based on their secondary sexual ornaments and d...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opp...
The challenge hypothesis (Wingfield et al. 1990, American Naturalist, 136, 829–846) predicts varying...
In male birds, the responsiveness of androgens to sexual and territorial behaviour is predicted to v...
Androgen levels show strong patterns throughout the year in male vertebrates and play an important r...
Males may face a trade-off between caring for offspring and pursuing additional matings. In birds, t...
A number of investigations in recent years have shown that seasonal profiles of testosterone (T) lev...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that male vertebrates can respond to social challenges, such as ...
The increase or decrease in yolk androgens over the laying sequence of a clutch in birds may mitigat...
Parental care provided by males occurs in a diverse array of animals and there are large differences...
Testosterone plays an important role in territorial behavior of many male vertebrates and the Challe...
High investment in mating and parental effort in male birds are considered mutually exclusive, as te...
Males and females are in conflict over parental care, as it would be favourable for one parent to sh...
A long-standing tenet of evolutionary endocrinology states that testosterone mediates the life-histo...
Several studies show that avian females prefer males based on their secondary sexual ornaments and d...
The Challenge Hypothesis postulates that androgen levels are a function of the social environment in...
Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opp...