article
Testicular volume and reproductive status of Wild Callithrix jacchus
Fecha
2008Registro en:
ARAÚJO, Arrilton ; SOUSA, Maria Bernardete Cordeiro . (2008)
Autor
Araújo, Arrilton
Sousa, Maria Bernardete Cordeiro de
Resumen
The social relationship dynamic among callitrichid females is well known.
Breeding exclusivity by dominant females involves female-female competition,
usually resulting in the inhibition of subordinate reproduction. However, the
strategies to maintain the male breeding position are still unclear. Researchers have
observed no overt aggression between males, and differences in testosterone levels
between dominant and subordinate individuals do not correlate with differences in
reproductive success. In Callithrix monogamy is the predominant mating system,
and testicular size is compatible with the absence of sperm competition. We analyzed
testicular volume during development in 95 individuals at different ages (infant n=
12, juvenile n=9, subadult n=15, and adult n=59). We also investigated if the ratio
between testicular volume and body mass correlates with breeding position in the
social group. The ratio was significantly higher in breeding males and a positive
correlation between body mass and testicular volume is significant only for
nonbreeding males. The findings suggest that testicular size varies with male
reproductive status in the social group and that the enlargement of testicular volume
in breeding common marmoset males seems to be a result of proximate causes and to
depend on social and reproductive contexts acting together or separately