Abstract

These studies explored the possibility that glucocorticoids promote parental care in ring doves by mediating, at least in part, the pronounced increase in food consumption that parent doves exhibit while provisioning their young. Plasma concentrations of the endogenous glucocorticoid corticosterone were found to be significantly higher in breeding females during the posthatching phase than during the incubation period. These differences were not observed in male breeding partners, but sex differences in daily activity rhythms are well documented in breeding doves, and blood sampling at different times of day would be required to adequately characterize the pattern of corticosterone in males during these breeding stages. In studies on nonbreeding doves, twice-daily intracerebroventricular (icv) injections of the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone (DEX) increased food intake by 25–50% in both sexes, and further studies in males revealed that the increase was directly related to the dose of DEX administered. The highest dose of DEX given icv (1.0 μg/day) was not effective in stimulating feeding when given systemically, thereby suggesting that the hyperphagic action of DEX is exerted directly on the central nervous system. The icv infusion of the selective glucocorticoid receptor antagonist RU38486 blocked the hyperphagic effects of twice-daily icv injections of DEX in both sexes. Collectively, these data support the hypothesis that corticosterone contributes to the parental hyperphagia exhibited by breeding doves during the posthatching period. They also suggest that these orexigenic effects are mediated in part by CNS binding sites that resemble mammalian glucocorticoid receptors.

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