Abstract

Gonadally intact female rats display sexual behaviors only during a portion of the estrus cycle. In standard experimental setups, the on- and offset of sexual behavior is gradual. However, in naturalistic settings, it is almost instantaneous. We assessed the changes in sociosexual behaviors at the beginning and end of behavioral estrus in ovariectomized females treated with ovarian hormones. Rats were housed in a seminatural environment, in groups of three males and four females. We scored female and male behavior during the 8 min preceding and following the first and last lordosis of behavioral estrus. Immediately before the first lordosis, there was a sharp increase in female paracopulatory behaviors whereas the end of estrus was marked by a sudden decrease in these behaviors. There was no systematic change in other female behavior patterns. These data suggest that the display of female paracopulatory behaviors plays a key role. Both during transition into and out of behavioral estrus, most behavioral changes occurred within one minute. The rapid changes must be unrelated to ovarian hormone fluctuations in these ovariectomized females. Perhaps they can be explained in terms of hormone-induced, dynamic (chaotic) changes in the function of critical structures within the brain.

Highlights

  • Sexual behavior in female rats consists of a few stereotyped motor patterns

  • The first and last lordosis of behavioral estrus in each individual rat was used as anchoring points for behavioral observation

  • Most changes appeared within the minute preceding the first lordosis, including the sharp increase in both the frequency and episode duration of paracopulatory behaviors

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Summary

Introduction

Sexual behavior in female rats consists of a few stereotyped motor patterns. Females displaying lordosis are called receptive, and the state of being receptive is named receptivity. Additional female sexual behavior patterns are ear wiggling (fast lateral or vertical movements of the head giving the impression that the female is wiggling her ears), hopping and darting (rapid running away from the male with small hops and darting movements). These behaviors are often grouped together under the label “solicitation” or “proceptive” (Beach, 1976; Erskine, 1989). It has been suggested that the term “paracopulatory behavior” is more appropriate (Blaustein and Erskine, 2002), and we have followed that suggestion for the last couple of years

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