1. Removal of the vomeronasal organ reduces reproductive performance and aggression in male prairie voles.
- Author
-
Wekesa KS and Lepri JJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Nasal Septum anatomy & histology, Vocalization, Animal physiology, Aggression physiology, Arvicolinae physiology, Nasal Septum physiology, Reproduction physiology, Sexual Behavior, Animal physiology
- Abstract
Several short-duration tests have demonstrated that the surgical removal of the vomeronasal organ (VNX) from sexually-inexperienced male rodents results in a reduction in copulatory behavior, compared to the effects of sham surgery (SHAM). We extended these studies to adult male prairie voles, Microtus ochrogaster, and substantially increased the duration of the tests. During the initial interactions with females, VNX males spent significantly less time with their noses in close proximity to the females than did SHAM males. Moreover, only two of nine VNX males sired offspring after having been paired with females for 8 weeks, whereas nine of 12 SHAM males sired offspring in that interval. We also found that VNX and SHAM males were equivalently non-aggressive to an anesthetized stimulus-male prior to being paired with females. However, after spending 2 weeks paired with a female, the VNX males were significantly less aggressive than were the SHAM males, possibly as a result of having copulated less often. In a later test, nearly all of the VNX and SHAM males that sired offspring were vigorously aggressive to a stimulus male. We conclude that the stimulation of the vomeronasal system in sexually-inexperienced male prairie voles is important for maximal reproductive performance and that the VNX-induced impairment in reproduction is associated with a decrease in inter-male aggression. The possible sensory effects of the vomeronasal system on the neural and endocrine control of reproduction and behavior are discussed.
- Published
- 1994
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