Publication | Open Access
Mesotocin and Nonapeptide Receptors Promote Estrildid Flocking Behavior
242
Citations
18
References
2009
Year
BiologyBreeding BehaviorFitnessBehavioral NeuroscienceNatural SciencesPhysiologyEvolutionary BiologyNeuroendocrine MechanismCollective MotionLateral SeptumNeuroecologyOt Antagonist InfusionsCentral Nervous SystemNervous SystemProximate Neural MechanismsAnimal BehaviorHealth Sciences
Proximate neural mechanisms that influence preferences for groups of a given size are almost wholly unknown. In the highly gregarious zebra finch (Estrildidae: Taeniopygia guttata), blockade of nonapeptide receptors by an oxytocin (OT) antagonist significantly reduced time spent with large groups and familiar social partners independent of time spent in social contact. Opposing effects were produced by central infusions of mesotocin (MT, avian homolog of OT). Most drug effects appeared to be female-specific. Across five estrildid finch species, species-typical group size correlates with nonapeptide receptor distributions in the lateral septum, and sociality in female zebra finches was reduced by OT antagonist infusions into the septum but not a control area. We propose that titration of sociality by MT represents a phylogenetically deep framework for the evolution of OT's female-specific roles in pair bonding and maternal functions.
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