Authors
Adam R Reddon, Constance M O'Connor, Erin Nesjan, Jason Cameron, Jennifer K Hellmann, Isaac Y Ligocki, Susan E Marsh-Rollo, Ian M Hamilton, Douglas R Wylie, Peter L Hurd, Sigal Balshine
Publication date
2017/5/17
Journal
Royal Society Open Science
Volume
4
Issue
5
Pages
170350
Publisher
The Royal Society Publishing
Description
Social living has evolved numerous times across a diverse array of animal taxa. An open question is how the transition to a social lifestyle has shaped, and been shaped by, the underlying neurohormonal machinery of social behaviour. The nonapeptide neurohormones, implicated in the regulation of social behaviours, are prime candidates for the neuroendocrine substrates of social evolution. Here, we examined the brains of eight cichlid fish species with divergent social systems, comparing the number and size of preoptic neurons that express the nonapeptides isotocin and vasotocin. While controlling for the influence of phylogeny and body size, we found that the highly social cooperatively breeding species (n = 4) had fewer parvocellular isotocin neurons than the less social independently breeding species (n = 4), suggesting that the evolutionary transition to group living and cooperative breeding was …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AR Reddon, CM O'Connor, E Nesjan, J Cameron… - Royal Society Open Science, 2017