Pituitary content of luteinizing hormone reveals species differences in the reproductive synchrony between males and females in Australian flying-foxes (genus Pteropus)

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dc.contributor O Brien, G M
dc.contributor McFarlane, J R
dc.contributor Kearney, P J
dc.date.accessioned 2012-01-30T12:32:14Z
dc.date.available 2012-01-30T12:32:14Z
dc.date.issued 2003
dc.identifier.citation Rep. Fert. Dev. (2003) 15(4): 255-261
dc.identifier.issn 1031-3613
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/16471
dc.description.abstract Flying-foxes (genus suborder, Pteropus Megachiroptera) are long-lived tropical mammals. Their seasonal reproduction appears to be regulated by an endogenous, circannual rhythm modified by multiple environmental cues. Luteinizing hormone (LH) content in pituitary extracts was examined to establish the broad time-frame of pituitary stages in the reproductive seasonality of the flying-foxes. A comparison was made between the grey-headed flying-fox P. poliocephalus, which mates and conceives in autumn, and the little red flying-fox P. scapulatus, which mates and conceives in spring. In P. scapulatus, LH was maximum during the spring mating season at 1494 ng mg<emph type="7">-1 in males and 896 ng mg<emph type="7">-1 in females. In P. poliocephalus males, LH increased to 1082 ng mg<emph type="7">-1 in early summer, 4 months before the mating season; LH concentrations in male P. poliocephalus returned to a low of 222 ng mg<emph type="7">-1 by the time of the autumn mating, by which time the female P. poliocephalus expressed elevated LH concentrations (624 ng mg<emph type="7">-1). Apparently in P. poliocephalus, the peak LH concentrations in females are delayed by 4 months relative to LH concentrations in males. This is associated with 4 months of energetic courtship on the part of male P. poliocephalus, which is not observed in P. scapulatus, the fertility of which is synchronized between the sexes. The heterologous radioimmunoassay developed using monoclonal antibody 518B7 confirmed classic suppression of LH during pregnancy and lactation in flying-foxes and LH elevation in response to gonadectomy. Juveniles generally had pituitary levels similar to non-breeding levels in adults.
dc.publisher CSIRO Publishing
dc.source.uri http://www.publish.csiro.au/?act=view_file&file_id=RD02075.pdf
dc.subject Chiroptera
dc.subject development
dc.subject endocrinology
dc.subject hypophysis
dc.subject reproduction
dc.subject reproductive physiology
dc.subject seasonal breeding
dc.title Pituitary content of luteinizing hormone reveals species differences in the reproductive synchrony between males and females in Australian flying-foxes (genus Pteropus)
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Journal article
dc.identifier.volume 15
dc.identifier.page 255-261
dc.identifier.issue 4


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