Experimental evidence that ovary and oviducal gland extracts influence male agonistic behavior in squids

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2004-02
Authors
Buresch, Kendra C.
Boal, Jean G.
Nagle, Gregg T.
Knowles, Jamie
Nobuhara, Robert
Sweeney, Kate
Hanlon, Roger T.
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10.2307/1543192
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Abstract
Recent investigations of sensory and behavioral cues that initiate sexual selection processes in the squid Loligo pealeii have determined that egg capsules deposited on the substrate provide a strong visual and chemotactile stimulus to males, even in the absence of females (1, 2, 3). The visual stimulus of egg capsules attracts males to the eggs, and when the males touch the eggs, they encounter a chemical stimulus that leads to highly aggressive fighting behavior. We have recently demonstrated that egg capsule extracts implanted in artificial egg capsules elicit this aggressive behavior (4). In this communication, we present evidence that the salient chemical factor originates in the ovary and perhaps the oviducal gland of the female reproductive tract.
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Author Posting. © Marine Biological Laboratory, 2004. This article is posted here by permission of Marine Biological Laboratory for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biological Bulletin 206 (2004): 1-3.
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Biological Bulletin 206 (2004): 1-3
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