Abstract

Although it is known that hormone concentrations vary considerably between individuals within a population, how they change across time and how they relate to an individual’s reproductive effort remains poorly quantified in wild animals. Using faecal samples collected from wild red deer stags, we examined sources of variation in faecal cortisol and androgen metabolites, and the potential relationship that these might have with an index of reproductive effort. We also biologically validated an assay for measuring androgen metabolites in red deer faeces.We show that variation in hormone concentrations between samples can be accounted for by the age of the individual and the season when the sample was collected. Faecal cortisol (but not androgen) metabolites also showed significant among-individual variation across the 10-year sampling time period, which accounted for 20% of the trait’s phenotypic variance after correcting for the age and season effects. Finally, we show that an index of male reproductive effort (cumulative harem size) during the mating season (rut) was positively correlated with male cortisol concentrations, both among and within individuals. We suggest that the highest ranking males have the largest cumulative harem sizes (i.e. invest the greatest reproductive effort), and that this social dominance may have associated behaviours such as increased frequency of agonistic interactions which are associated with corresponding high levels of faecal cortisol metabolites (FCM).

Highlights

  • Hormone concentrations vary between individuals within a population (Williams, 2008), how this relates to individual-level variation in fitness-related behaviour remains poorly quantified in the wild

  • In this study we focused on variation in male behaviour during the mating season in a wild population of red deer (Cervus elaphus), and tested for associations with faecal concentrations of androgen and glucocorticoid metabolite

  • faecal androgen metabolites (FAM), faecal cortisol metabolites (FCM) and cumulative harem size varied significantly with a stag’s age (FAM: p < 0.001; FCM: p = 0.012; cumulative harem size: p < 0.001: Table 1; Fig. 2 and Fig. s5), age at final sampling did not significantly improve the model when considered for either hormone (FAM: p = 0.777; FCM: p = 0.864; Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Hormone concentrations vary between individuals within a population (Williams, 2008), how this relates to individual-level variation in fitness-related behaviour remains poorly quantified in the wild. In this study we focused on variation in male behaviour during the mating season (rut) in a wild population of red deer (Cervus elaphus), and tested for associations with faecal concentrations of androgen and glucocorticoid metabolite. We use data from a long-term study of a wild red deer population to test for associations between cumulative harem size (an index of reproductive effort which indicates access to females during the rut) and androgen and glucocorticoid levels respectively

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