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© 1996 International Society for Behavioral Ecology

research-article

The cost of producing a sexual signal: testosterone increases the susceptibility of male lizards to ectoparasitic infestation

Alfredo Salvadora, Jose P. Veigaa, Jose Martina,b, Pilar Lopeza,, Maria Abelendac and Marisa Puertacc

aDepartamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Museo National de Ciencias Naturales C. S.I.C., J. Gutierrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid, Spain bDepartment of Zoology, Uppsala University Villavagen 9, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden cDepartamento de Biologia Animal II (Fisiologí a Animal), Facultad de Ciencias Bioló gicas, Universidad Complutense 28040 Madrid, Spain

ABSTRACT

According to current evolutionary theory, advertising traits that honestly indicate an organism's genetic quality might be costly to produce or maintain, though the kind of costs involved in this process are controversial. Recently the immunocompetence hypothesis has proposed that testosterone (T) stimulates the expression of male sexually selected traits while decreasing immunocompetence. Even though some recent studies have shown an effect of T on ectoparasite load, the dual effect of the hormone has not been addressed in free-living populations. Here we report results of an experiment in a free-living population of the lizard Psammodromus algirus during the mating season. Males implanted with T had larger patches of breeding color and behaved more aggressively than control males. In T-implanted males, the increase in number of ticks during the mating season was significantly higher than in control males and this negatively affected several hematological parameters. T-males suffered significantly higher mortality than control males during the experiment The results from the manipulation of T are consistent with the dual effect of this hormone.

Key words: parasites, Psammodromus algirus, secondary sexual characters, testosterone, [Behav Ecol 7: 145–150 (1996)].


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