scholarly journals Histological Changes in the Regressing Reproductive Organs of Sexually Mature Male and Female Japanese Quail

1974 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 168-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor P. Eroschenko ◽  
Wilbor O. Wilson
Reproduction ◽  
2001 ◽  
pp. 155-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Berg ◽  
L Holm ◽  
I Brandt ◽  
B Brunstrom

Oestrogen is needed for normal oviductal development in female birds, but excessive early exposure to oestrogen can cause oviductal abnormalities and impair egg-laying ability. In this study, the anatomical and histological effects of in ovo exposure to the synthetic oestrogen ethynyloestradiol on the oviducts of immature and adult female Japanese quail, Coturnix japonica, were investigated. A series of abnormalities was observed after injection of ethynyloestradiol (2 or 20 ng g(-1) egg) into the yolk on day 3 of incubation. Ethynyloestradiol induced precocious differentiation of the luminal epithelium and tubular glands in immature chicks. Right-side oviduct retention occurred at all the ages studied, whereas certain other effects were not evident until sexual maturity. The left oviduct was reduced in size and tubular gland density in the uterus (shell gland) was reduced in sexually mature birds that had been treated with ethynyloestradiol. The utero-vaginal junction was longer than in control birds and had a higher tubular gland density. The epithelial cells in the magnum were taller in birds treated with ethynyloestradiol. Embryonic exposure to the environmental contaminant ethynyloestradiol may cause persisting structural malformations in oviducts of quails, which can impair fertility. As oviductal malformations are indicative of embryonic exposure to exogenous oestrogen, they are potentially useful as biomarkers of xenooestrogen exposure in wild bird populations.


1989 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 711 ◽  
Author(s):  
WD Sumpton ◽  
GS Smith ◽  
MA Potter

Trawl-caught Portunus sanguinolentus were more abundant in oceanic than estuarine waters in south- east Queensland. In samples, males outnumbered females by 1.7 : 1. Males attained a larger size than females and, for a given carapace width, weighed more than females. The smallest sexually mature male and female crabs had carapace widths of 83 and 74 mm respectively. Crabs recruited to the sampled population throughout most of the year except during winter, when moulting activity was also limited. April-May was a major mating period, and it is postulated that mature female crabs moved into deeper oceanic water to spawn.


1990 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 207 ◽  
Author(s):  
PA Woolley

The breeding season of S. macroura extends from June to February, and individual males (both wild- caught and laboratory-reared) are capable of breeding over extended periods during the breeding season, and for up to three seasons, in the laboratory. Gross and histological changes in the reproductive organs and endocrine changes in relation to reproductive activity have been investigated. Males do not appear to reach sexual maturity until the season following that in which they were born, although spermatorrhoea may commence in the season of birth. Testis and epididymis weight of these males, which commence spermatorrhoea late in the season, approximates that of sexually mature males early in the season but androgen levels and the weight of the accessory glands are low in all males except during the early months of the season. The age at which spermatorrhoea commences ranges from 141 to 350 days. The minimum scrota1 width at which it commences is 7.9 mm and the minimum body weight, 14.0 g. The onset of spermatorrhoea is not a function of age or season and in S. macroura should be used with caution as an indicator of impending sexual maturity. Maximum corticosteroid- binding capacity (MCBC) generally exceeded corticosteroid concentration and no androgen-related fall in MCBC was evident.


Author(s):  
S.D. Bamber ◽  
E. Naylor

A new behavioural bioassay system has been used to examine chemical communication in the crab Carcinus maenas (Crustacea: Brachyura) and has demonstrated the sexually and temporally specific nature of a putative sex pheromone. Mature premoult and postmoult females evoked sexual behavioural responses from receptive male crabs. No response was obtained when intermoult female and premoult and postmoult male crabs were tested. Postmoult females continued to be chemically attractive to male crabs with a similar intensity to that of late premoult females for >8 d following moulting, and then with a reduced intensity for >14 d. Male C. maenas successfully entered copula with females >13 d after the female moult.


1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 465-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Mineau ◽  
Dale Madison

Miniature radio transmitters and 'local' triangulation methods were used to monitor the movements of free-ranging Peromyscus leucopus. A sexually mature male and female were studied in detail during two sessions within a 6-week period. Positions were recorded on 107 occasions, giving home ranges of 1.26 ha for the male and 0.91 ha for the female. Extensive home range overlap, correspondence in patterns of movement, the bearing of a litter by the female, and the lack of other adults in the study area indicate pair activity. The equipment and methods described will enable more thorough studies of the ecology and behavior of small, highly mobile rodent species in the future.


Mammalia ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan A. Nations ◽  
Ahmad Mursyid ◽  
Ryski Darma Busta ◽  
Sah Putra Adrian ◽  
Heru Handika ◽  
...  

AbstractAlbinism, a congenital disorder that results in a lack of melanin deposition, is common in domesticated animals but rare in nature. Among the ∼2500 species of rodents worldwide, only 67 have published reports of albinism. Here we report the capture of an albino murid (Muridae: Rodentia) from Mt. Singgalang in West Sumatra, Indonesia. The specimen is an adolescent but sexually mature male Maxomys hylomyoides, a montane Sumatran endemic. To our knowledge, this specimen represents the first reported albino rodent from Indonesia and Sundaland, and only the second from Southeast Asia.


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