Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated gonadal control of mammalian scent glands; castration leads to reduced scent-marking rates and smaller gland sizes. I investigated whether gonadal hormones control the size of the dorsal gland (a specialized sebaceous gland) and sandbathing as a scent-marking behavior in adult male and female bannertail kangaroo rats ( Dipodomys spectabilis). Gland sizes of males and females were similar in all age classes, except adult males with larger body weights had proportionately larger glands than females. Male gland sizes declined 18% following castration but were not significantly smaller than those of intact males; females showed no change in dorsal gland size either as a result of ovariectomy or after estradiol benzoate implants. Sandbathing rates also did not decline as a result of gonadectomy. Rather, castrated males and overiectomized females sandbathed at higher frequencies than intact males and ovariectomized females with estradiol benzoate implants, respectively. Gonadal hormones apparently have little influence on the function of a specialized scent gland and may inhibit sandbathing as a scent-marking behavior in adult D. spectabilis.
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