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Hen social position shifts egg hormones. (Chicken Rank).


A study of leghorn chickens has linked hormone concentrations in a hen's eggs to her rank in the pecking order.

The yolks of low-ranking hens' eggs harboring males have about the same concentrations of testosterone and one of its chemical precursors as do yolks of eggs containing female embryos, says Wendt Muller of the University of Groningen Degree programmes
Bachelor's degree programmes
The Bachelor phase lasts three years and after successful completion of a Bachelor's programme result in a BSc or BA degree. There are a total number of 61 Bachelor degree programmes.
 in the Netherlands. The male-to-be eggs of top females, however, have an extra dose of these hormones, Muller and his colleagues report in an upcoming Proceedings of the Royal Society Proceedings of the Royal Society is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society of London.

Today, the Royal Society publishes two proceeding series:
  • Series A, which publishes research related to mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
 of London B. The researchers speculate that parental investment of extra male hormones may make chicks more robust, competitive, and therefore more likely to reproduce.

The new finding complicates other scientists' notion that such an extra dose of hormone might make an egg turn out male instead of female.

Theories of parental favoritism rest on the idea that, in bad times--such as when a hen is near the bottom of the pecking order--sons may not grow up to win the mating game. Then, investing in daughters is a safer bet because in many species, including chickens, low-ranked females are more likely to have offspring than low-ranked males are. "If you're a bad male, you don't get any success," says Muller. "But if you're a bad female, you still have matings."

The study by Muller and his colleagues adds to a growing body of evidence supporting shifts in maternal favoritism. Some females even adjust the ratio of male to female offspring depending on the circumstances.

Just what biochemical mechanism might be behind such shifts has been quite a puzzle. Scientists have considered hormones in the yolk yolk (yok) the stored nutrient of an oocyte or ovum.

yolk
n.
The portion of the egg of an animal that consists of protein and fat from which the early embryo gets its main nourishment and of
, which is produced before the sex of the chick embryo is determined. A 1993 study hadn't found differences in male hormones between yolks of male and female canary eggs. But Marion Petrie of the University of Newcastle University of Newcastle can refer to:
  • Newcastle University, a university in the United Kingdom.
  • The University of Newcastle, a university in New South Wales, Australia
 in Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle upon Tyne, city (1991 pop. 199,064) and metropolitan district, NE England, on the Tyne River. The city is an important shipping and trade center. The famous coal-shipping industry began in the 13th cent.  in England and her colleagues last year reported finding that the concentrations of four male hormones in the egg yolks of 10-day-old male peafowl peafowl: see peacock.  embryos differed from those in yolks of females. Petrie's study didn't consider pecking order.

In their recent work, Muller and his colleagues checked testosterone and a hormone precursor, androstenedione androstenedione /an·dro·stene·di·one/ (-di-on) an androgenic steroid produced by the testis, adrenal cortex, and ovary; converted metabolically to testosterone and other androgens. , in 3-day-old eggs from five leghorn Leghorn: see Livorno, Italy.
leghorn

Breed of chicken that originated in Italy; the only Mediterranean breed of importance today. Of the 12 varieties, the single-comb white leghorn is more popular than all the other leghorns combined; the leading
 groups. When the researchers didn't take into account the rank of the mothers, the two sexes didn't show consistent differences in yolk hormones. However, when the investigators examined only eggs from plump, high-ranking mothers, differences between the sexes appeared.

This result dashes any hopes scientists might have had that sex-ratio manipulation could be as straightforward as adding a dash of testosterone to the yolk to make males. "It's not so simple," Muller concludes.

There may not be a direct link between egg sex and yolk hormones, but the Muller experiment can't completely dismiss the idea, says Petrie.
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Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:4EUNE
Date:Oct 12, 2002
Words:469
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