Conditional on the social environment? Roots of repeatability in hormone concentrations of male guinea pigs

Mutwill AM; Schielzeth H; Richter SH; Kaiser S; Sachser N

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Individual differences in behavioral and physiological traits among members of the same species are increasingly being recognized as important in animal research. On the group level, shaping of behavioral and hormonal phenotypes by environmental factors has been reported in different taxa. The extent to which the environment impacts behavior and hormones on the individual level, however, is rather unexplored. Hormonal phenotypes of guinea pigs can be shaped by the social environment on the group level: pair-housed and colony-housed males differ systematically in average testosterone and stressor-induced cortisol levels (i.e. cortisol responsiveness). The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether repeatability and individual variance components (i.e. between- and within-individual variation) of hormonal phenotypes also differ in different social environments. To test this, we determined baseline testosterone, baseline cortisol, and cortisol responsiveness after challenge in same-aged pair-housed and colony-housed guinea pig males over a period of four months. We found comparable repeatability for baseline cortisol and cortisol responsiveness in males from both social conditions. In contrast, baseline testosterone was repeatable only in males from colonies. Interestingly, this result was brought about by significantly larger between-individual variation of testosterone, that was not explained by differences in dominance rank. Individualized social niches differentiated under complex colony, but not pair housing, could be an explanation for this finding.

Details about the publication

JournalHormones and Behavior
Volume155
Article number105423
StatusPublished
Release year2023
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105423
KeywordsAnimal personality; Between-individual variance; Within-individual variance; Endocrine phenotype; Social environment; Individualized social niche

Authors from the University of Münster

Mutwill, Alexandra
Professorship of Neuro- and Behavioural Biology (Prof. Sachser)