Abstract

Ovarian hormone levels were monitored in rhesus monkeys during the breeding and non-breeding seasons. Ovulation (as inferred from progesterone levels in blood serum in excess of 1.5 ng/ml) was most frequent in the breeding season but was absent only during the month of August. Summer (non-breeding season) ovulations were more frequently “silent,” or without heterosexual behavior, than were winter ovulations. This finding suggested that estradiol stimulation may cause different behavioral responses at different times of the year. To test this hypothesis, ovariectomized females were treated with subcutaneously implanted estradiol capsules at different times within and outside the normal breeding season. In either season, treatment with estradiol resulted in increased female-to-female sexual behavior. Only during the breeding season, however, did the estradiol-treated ovariectomized females interact sexually with males. Although males copulated with both estradiol-treated and gonadally intact, untreated females during the breeding season, their rate of copulation with the intact females was higher. The results suggest that: (1) Some female rhesus monkeys displaying strictly seasonal breeding behavior continue to have luteal activity indicative of ovulation in May, June and July, (2) Summer ovulatory cycles are rarely accompanied by sexual behavior, (3) Estradiol treatment of ovariectomized females induces female-to-female sexual behavior both in the breeding and non-breeding seasons, and (4) Males are less responsive to the presence of estrogen-stimulated females in the non-breeding season than in the breeding season.

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