首页|Environmental experiences influence cortical volume in territorial and nonterritorial side-blotched lizards, Uta stansburiana

Environmental experiences influence cortical volume in territorial and nonterritorial side-blotched lizards, Uta stansburiana

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Behaviours such as territoriality, navigation and acquisition of food resources depend on spatially based cognition, which has been positively associated with the hippocampus, the area of the brain responsible for spatial processing. We previously demonstrated that differential demands on spatial processing within the context of territoriality affect brain volume in the side-blotched lizard, Uta stansburiana: territorial males have larger cortices (reptilian hippocampal homologues) than nonterritorial males. However, it is still unclear whether these cortical differences are based on potential differences in experiences, genetic architecture, or a combination of both. In this study, we specifically focused on the role of experiences in the cortical phenotype. We hatched and raised territorial and nonterritorial males to adulthood, controlling for differential environmental experiences, and found that cortical volume did not differ between laboratory-reared territorial and nonterritorial males. Furthermore, when compared with wild-caught individuals, laboratory-reared individuals had significantly smaller cortical volumes, regardless of territorial predisposition. These results indicate that a large component of the differential cortical volume found between territorial and nonterritorial lizards in the wild must be experiential. Additionally, cortical volume is smaller in a captive environment, regardless of territorial predisposition. Our work indicates that experience, particularly experience with a simplified environment such as that found in captivity, dramatically limits the size of the cortices in this species. (C) 2016 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

dorsal cortexenvironmental experiencelizardmedial cortexspatialUta stansburiana

LaDage, Lara D.、Roth, Timothy C., II、Sinervo, Barry、Pravosudov, Vladimir V.

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Penn State Univ Altoona, Div Math & Nat Sci, 3000 Ivyside Pk, Altoona, PA 16601 USA

Franklin & Marshall Coll, Dept Psychol, Lancaster, PA 17604 USA

Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA

Univ Nevada, Dept Biol, Reno, NV 89557 USA

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2016

Animal behaviour

Animal behaviour

SCI
ISSN:0003-3472
年,卷(期):2016.115
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