Abstract
An analysis of the spermatogenic condition and of the weights of testes from about 450 brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater) was made to determine the annual cycle of this species at London, Ontario, and to ascertain variation in the cycle due to age. Testes of birds more than 1 year old (adult) reached maximal weights in late April and early May coincident with the beginning of egg-laying, and about 3 weeks before the testes of 1-year-old birds (yearlings) reached their maximal weight. The mean weights of testes of adults were usually greater, often significantly so, than those of yearlings. From about May 23 to June 23 there were no statistically significant differences in the weights of testes from the two age groups. Beginning in late June, the weights of testes declined rapidly in both age groups and reached a minimum in August. Minimal weights of testes persisted in captive birds until February.Large amounts of sperm were present in the testes of adults in mid-April and of yearlings in late April well in advance of maximal testicular weights. Sperm production occurred in most birds until early July but had ceased in most by late July.Testes, apparently undergoing regression, were noted significantly (p <.005) more frequently in adults than in yearlings in May and early June at the height of the breeding season. The significance of this observation and some aspects of testicular regression, previously unrecorded, are discussed. Adult birds are more sedentary than most yearlings in the breeding season and, unlike the latter, habitually associate with the same female. These behavioral differences may be related to the observed differences between the age groups in the testicular cycle.
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