Lecture 5: Hormones involved in Parental and Social Behavior Flashcards
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (1)
1) Prolactin
* Primarily produced by the anterior pituitary gland in response to prolactin-releasing factor produced by the hypothalamus.
* In females, prolactin plays a central role in lactation and milk production after childbirth (oxytocin does the release of milk). During pregnancy, prolactin levels rise steadily, preparing the breasts for lactation.
* In males, prolactin also serves various functions, including regulation of the immune system, metabolism, and reproduction. Its effects on reproductive function includes sperm production and regulation of testosterone levels. Helps regulate steroid sexual hormones.
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (2)
2) Oxytocin:
Produced primarily in the hypothalamus and released by the posterior pituitary gland. It is involved in:
* Labor and childbirth: Oxytocin stimulates uterine contractions during labor, facilitating childbirth, and promotes the ejection of milk during breastfeeding.
* Maternal behavior: Often referred to as the “love hormone” or “bonding hormone“. It is associated with intimate physical contact, such as hugging, kissing, and attachment (secure vs insecure attachment - oxytocin is related to more secure attachment style) .
* Stress regulation: helps modulate the body’s stress responses by attenuating the release of stress hormones like cortisol.
* Social behavior: Oxytocin influences social behaviors such as empathy, generosity, and social cognition.
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (3)
3) Estradiol (main female hormone - from same family from estrogen)
* Primarily produced by the ovaries in women. During the menstrual cycle, estradiol levels rise during the follicular phase, which occurs before ovulation.
* Positive effect on mood, improved mood, increased energy, boost in confidence and self esteem.
* Plays a crucial role in the development and maintenance of female reproductive tissues, and influences secondary sexual characteristics such as breast development and body fat distribution
* In men, estradiol is synthesized in small amounts primarily in the testes. This hormone is produced by testosterone (enzyme converts testosterone to estrodial). Testosterone, the main male sex hormone, is converted to estradiol through the action of the enzyme aromatase.
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (4)
4) Progesterone
* Second stage of menstrual process.
* Progesterone is mainly produced by the corpus luteum in the ovary after ovulation. It helps prepare the uterine lining for potential implantation. During pregnancy, the placenta becomes the primary source of progesterone production.
* In both men and women, small amounts of progesterone are also produced by the adrenal glands. These adrenal hormones play various roles in regulating metabolism, stress responses, and other physiological functions. Also produced in males.
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (5)
5) Cortisol - cortical steroid in animals, dexamethasone is its artificial name (synthetic form)!!
* Plays a role in long-term stress response. Released in response to stress 20 mins later, not immediate.
* It belongs to a class of hormones called glucocorticoids and plays a vital role in the body’s stress response and regulation of various physiological processes.
* It is often referred to as the “stress hormone” because it is released in response to stress and helps the body cope with stressful situations (long term stress response).
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (6)
6) Testosterone
* Steroid hormone belonging to the class of androgens, primarily produced in the testes in men and in smaller amounts in the ovaries and adrenal glands in women.
* It is considered the primary male sex hormone, although it also plays important roles in women’s health.
* It is involved in Secondary Sexual Characteristics; Libido and Sexual Function; Bone Health; Muscle Mass and Strength: Mood; Metabolism and Fat Distribution
* Messing with testosterone balance can lead to psychosis, mood and cancer.
Main Hormones associated with Parental and Social Behavior (7)
7) Vasopressin
* Also known as antidiuretic hormone (ADH), is a peptide hormone produced primarily in the hypothalamus and released by the posterior pituitary gland.
* It plays several important roles in the body’s regulation of water balance, blood pressure, and social behavior.
* Higher levels of vasopressin are associated with various aspects of social bonding and affiliation, including Pair Bonding; Parental Behavior: Aggression and Territoriality: Social Recognition and Memory
- more important in males for affiliation compared to females (where oxytocin is more important).
Different outcomes from similar zoo incidents
- female gorilla approaches chold and taps it on back - affection, protecting the boy
- carries injured boy to gate (oxytocin)
- depending on the sex of the gorilla, we had different response (Both females were lacting).
- male gorilla was however agressive and hurt child (testosterone).
Define Parental Behavior
Parental behavior: behaviors performed in relation to one’s offspring that contribute directly to the survival of fertilized eggs or offspring that have left the body of the female. Can be distinguished into Maternal or Paternal Behavior. Varies in terms of sex, developmental stage and context.
Parental care is critical for infant survival among many species, including humans, and hence is critical for the reproductive success of the individual parent(s)
What is the currency of reproductive success from an evolutionary perspective?
From an evolutionary perspective, the only currency of reproductive success is the production of successful offspring, that is, offspring that themselves manage to survive and produce descendants. The offspring of many animal species require assistance from one or both parents to attain maturity and reproduce themselves.
- Parental behaviour is necessary for reproduction.
What is the optimal strategy for each parent? Parental Investement theory = the amount of assistance needed for offspring success.
- The amount of assistance that parents provide varies widely, both among and within species, and reflects an optimal evolutionary strategy for maximizing fitness.
- The optimal strategy for each parent is to provide sufficient care but no more than is absolutely necessary to produce successful offspring.
Define parental investment theory?
Parental investment: the extent to which parents compromise their ability to produce additional offspring in order to assist current offspring.
Parental behavior: Behaviors performed in relation to one’s offspring that contribute directly to the survival of fertilized eggs or offspring that have left the body of the female. Can be distinguished into Maternal or Paternal Behavior.
Generally, the sex making the larger investment in the offspring is the choosier about potential mates. Whereas individuals of the sex that contributes fewer resources to offspring success compete among themselves to be chosen. In most species of mammals, females are generally the choosier sex and invest the most parental care.
How does Parental investement vary?
- How the offspring comes to the world is also important, it will influence how much parental behaviour influences the offspring.
- Parental investment varies according to the offspring’s maturity at birth, number and survival fit of the offspring
- Precocial Born Offspring: Born or hatched at an advanced stage of development. Precocial young require little or no parental intervention for survival. Does not mean that they do not require any parental care!
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Altricial Born Offspring: Born or hatched at an early stage of development. Altricial offspring are generally quite helpless and require substantial parental care to survive.
- (ie, kangooros - cannot thermoregulate).
- Wood shavings in rats replicates the heat (helps thermoregulate), if we remove these wood shavings we can mimick a poor environment (poverty for rats).
PIT: Humans are Semiprecocials
Humans are Semiprecocials: We are born in an intermediate state between altricial and precocial. In semiprecocial species, the offspring are born with some degree of development and independence but still requires parental investment.
Babies are able to thermoregulate - this is was differentiates us from altricial. We have a thin layer of fat which allows us to do it. This is why prenatal babies are put in a incubator because they dont have this ability to thermoregulate yet.
How animals learn how to parent?
In animals that display parental care, ideally the behaviors must be performed correctly, with little margin for error; they initially must be performed without previous experience, and they must usually begin immediately after the hatching or birth of the offspring.
Dogs parental behavior
Dogs are altricials.
Atricial puppies are blind and partially deaf, their coats are not completely established, and their thermoregulatory and locomotor abilities are not fully developed. Without learning some species show this behavior that is important for species development.
Main maternal behaviors in dogs:
o A day or two prior to giving birth, a pregnant dog builds a nest into which her puppies will be delivered (use resources, t-shirts, tissues…).
o As each pup is born, the mother behaves solicitously toward it, licking off the amniotic fluid, membranes and the anogenital region (to stimulate the elimination of wastes and other physiological processes).
o They know how to lay down to expose her nipples to nurse.
o She will retrieve pups if they go far away;
o They show maternal aggression to intruders. In the absence of pups, they do not get territorial. There is something in the pups.
Influence of hormones on animal parental behavior
- Hormones associated with pregnancy and lactation regulate the onset of mammalian parental behavior, affecting motivation to engage in parental care. Importance in initiating and maintaining maternal care.
- The hormones that trigger parental behavior wane soon after the arrival of the young, and with it many maternal behaviors, including nursing, completely disappear after a few additional weeks.
- Hormones correlate with this reduction of maternal behavior. This implies a correlation.
Sex differences in parental behavior: is maternal or paternal care more common?
Maternal care is much more common:
* With the exception of most bird and some fish species, paternal behavior is rather rare in the animal kingdom; This happens because female and males differ on how they can best maximize reproductive success.
* Females will tend to put the majority of their reproductive effort into parental care, because each offspring represents a substantial proportion of a female’s lifetime investment of time and resources. ie, humans: cost and investement is much greater for womens (9 months to generate offspring and fertility can be further delayed because of lactation).
Costs for women
Pregnancy lasts 9 months, and lactation-induced infertility can delay further reproductive efforts for another year or two. During this same time, a man could potentially fertilize hundreds of women.
HIGH COST for women which is related to generating the baby and to lactation.
Lactational amenorrhea
Lactational amenorrhea (menstruation interruption), is the temporary postnatal infertility that occurs when a woman is breastfeeding
* High levels of prolactin due to stimulation of oxytocin.
* prolactin feedbacks to hypothalamus and inhibits the release of GnRH.
* Sometimes the stimulus of the nipple is not enough to create prolactin to inhibit.
Inducing Lactation without pregnancy
- It’s more common than we think, some individuals go over hormonal treatment to lactate.
- Induced lactation typically involves hormonal therapy, breast stimulation, and regular breast pumping or nursing to mimic the conditions that promote milk production. This process is often used by adoptive mothers, surrogates, or individuals in same-sex partnerships who wish to breastfeed their babies.
- Prolactin and estrogen and galactogis hormones all needed for this
- Men can do this…requires androgen blockers as well.
Factors associated with sex differences in parental behavior:
1) Efforts in mating or parental behavior:In females mating with additional males while pregnant or lactating typically does nothing to increase reproductive success unless this provide resources to the female or the offspring.
- Males’ reproductive success depends on the number of females he fertilizes. Thus, evolutionary speaking males weight on if it is more advantageous to forgo additional mating opportunities or to help raise his offspring
2) Birth developmental stage of the offspring: Depending on the demanded level of care of the offspring, in some situations two adults are required to guarantee the survival of the young, as is the case for many avian species.
- This can be observed if parental males achieve higher reproductive success than nonparental males
3) How males are able to meet offspring’s demands: For example, male birds are as capable as females of providing parental care(nest construction, incubation of the eggs, and feeding). This ability of avian fathers to feed their young—usually by regurgitating the results of recent meals contrasts sharply with most mammalian species, in which only the mother can meet the nutritional demands
Endocrine correlates of Avian (birds) parental behavior
Birds display enormous diversity in parental behavior, and offspring development at birth (hatch)
- Biparental
- Females only (chicken)
- Adoptive (alloparental care- provided by individuals other than their genetic parents, strangers provide care to offspring that is not theirs)
Endocrine correlates of Avian (birds) parental behavior: Discovery of prolactin effects on parental behavior.
Discovery of prolactin effects on parental behavior: first evidence that hormones are important for parental behaviours comes from birds.
1-Blood serum from a broody hen (ovulating hem- has fertilized egg) could induces a no incubating hen to sit on a clutch of eggs. This is related to the prolactin hormone. Injection of prolactin in females will lead to this behaviour. So after maternal behaviour has been initiated by hormones, virtually any contact we see is sufficient to maintain normal brooding behaviour. Brooding behaviour is when they use their wings and feathers to thermoregulate and take care of offspring.
2-Increased blood concentrations of prolactin are
associated with broodiness in all female birds studied to date
Why are birds so studied (hens in general):
- high prolactin levels when engaging with maternal behaviours . If prolactin levels are high this influences GnRH. When the hens are engaging in maternal behaviours, they are not producing eggs.
Prolactin will inhibit neurons in the hippothalamus that are responsible for GnRH, which in turn inhibits LH (same as in humans) that are responsible for ovulation.
Prolacting levels are related to the Crop milk. more prolactin = more crop milk from crop sac.
Prolactin destimulates the ovaries, the ovaries weight is much smaller if they are receiving prolacting