Reproductive Behaviour
Reproductive Behaviour
• Certain invertebrates reproduce sexually when they live in a complex and changing
environment, but reproduce nonsexually when they live in a constant environment
(Becks & Agrawal, 2010).
• Sex also corrects errors: If you have a disadvantageous mutation in one gene and
your mate has a disadvantageous mutation in a different gene, your children could
have a normal copy of both genes.
• Male and female mammals start with the same anatomy during an early stage
of prenatal development.
fi
ü
• The developing testes produce androgens (hormones that are more abundant in males) that
increase the growth of the testes, causing them to produce more androgens and so forth.
• That positive feedback cannot go on forever, but it lasts for a period of early development.
• Androgens also cause the primitive Wolf an ducts, precursors for other male reproductive
structures, to develop into seminal vesicles (saclike structures that store semen) and the vas
deferens (a duct from the testis into the penis).
• The testes also produce M llerian inhibiting hormone (MIH), which causes the M llerian
ducts to degenerate.
ü
fi
ü
• Because females do not have the SRY gene, their gonads develop
into ovaries instead of testes, and their Wolf an ducts degenerate.
fi
ü
fi
• Androgens and estrogens also in uence activity in many brain areas and alter the
pattern of which neurons survive during early development (Forger et al., 2004;
Morris, Jordan, & Breedlove, 2004).
• Certain brain areas are relatively larger in men, on average, and others relatively
larger in women.
• At least three genes on the Y chromosome (found only in men) are active in speci c
brain areas, and at least one gene on the X chromosome is active only in the female
brain (Arnold, 2004; Carruth, Reisert, & Arnold, 2002; Vawter et al., 2004).
• In both humans and nonhumans, the Y chromosome has many sites that alter the
expression of genes on other chromosomes (Lemos, Araripe, & Hartl, 2008).
fl
fi
Organising effects of sex hormones
• Biologists distinguish between the organizing and activating effects of sex hormones (Arnold, 2009).
Organizing effects produce long-lasting structural effects.
• The most prominent organizing effects occur during a sensitive stage of early development—shortly before
and after birth in rats and well before birth in humans—determining whether the body develops female or male
anatomy.
• The surge of hormones at puberty also produces long-lasting effects, such as breast development in women,
facial hair in men, and male–female differences in the anatomy of certain parts of the hypothalamus (Ahmed et
al., 2008).
• Activating effects are more temporary, when a hormone increases some activity that lasts only while the
hormone is present.
• The distinction between the two kinds of effects is not absolute, as a hormone can produce a combination of
temporary and longer-lasting effects (Arnold & Breedlove, 1985; C. L. Williams, 1986).
• The human sensitive period for genital formation is about the third
and fourth months of pregnancy (Money & Ehrhardt, 1972).
• A female rat that is injected with testosterone shortly before or after birth is
partly masculinized, just as if her own body had produced the testosterone
(I. L. Ward & Ward, 1985).
fi
• Drugs that tend to feminize or demasculinize early development
include alcohol, marijuana, haloperidol (an antipsychotic drug),
phthalates (chemicals common in many manufactured products),
and cocaine (Ahmed, Shryne, Gorski, Branch, & Taylor, 1991).
• The overall mechanism of early sexual differentiation has been described by saying
that nature’s “default setting” is to make every mammal a female.
• Add early testosterone and the individual becomes a male; without testosterone, it
develops as a female, regardless of the amount of estradiol or other estrogens.
• A genetic female that lacks estradiol during the early sensitive period develops
approximately normal female external anatomy but does not develop normal sexual
behavior.
• Even if she is given estradiol injections as an adult, she shows little sexual response
toward either male or female partners (Bakker, Honda, Harada, & Balthazart, 2002)
• Those who show the greatest preference for boys’ toys and activities
at age 3.5 usually show the greatest amount of typical boys’ activities
at age 8, and they tend to be the most physically active at age 12.
• Similarly, those with the greatest preference for girls’ toys and
activities at 3.5 usually show the greatest preference for typical girls’
activities at later ages (Golombok et al., 2008; Mattocks et al., 2010).
• In one study, infants 3–8 months old (too young to walk, crawl, or do
much with a toy) sat in front of pairs of toys, where researchers could
monitor eye movements. The girls looked at dolls more than they
looked at toy trucks. The boys looked at both about equally
(Alexander, Wilcox, & Woods, 2009).
• Estrogens increase the sensitivity of the pudendal nerve, which transmits tactile
stimulation from the vagina and cervix to the brain (Komisaruk, Adler, &
Hutchison,1972).
• Testosterone increases sensitivity in the penis (Etgen, Chu, Fiber, Karkanias, &
Morales, 1999).
• Sex hormones also bind to receptors that increase responses in parts of the
hypothalamus, including the ventromedial nucleus, the medial preoptic area
(MPOA), and the anterior hypothalamus.
• Erection depends partly on the fact that testosterone increases the release of
nitric oxide (NO), which increases blood ow to the penis.
fl
receptors, which facilitate erection of the penis in the male (Hull et al., 1992)
and sexually receptive postures in the female (Apostolakis et al., 1996).
• The sudden burst of dopamine in several brain areas at the time of orgasm
resembles the “rush” that addictive drugs produce (Holstege et al., 2003).
• Many popular antidepressant drugs increase serotonin activity, and one of their
side effects is to decrease sexual arousal and orgasm.
• In a study, a male rat was con ned to that cage, but the female was free
to enter or leave at any time. She could therefore control the timing of
when their sexual activity started and stopped.
• Evidently, female rats nd sex reinforcing only if they get to decide when
it occurs.
fi
fi
• Testosterone decreases pain and anxiety, and estrogens probably do, too
(Edinger & Frye, 2004).
• Estrogens directly stimulate parts of the prefrontal cortex that are important
for working memory—that is, memory for what one is doing at the moment
(Wang, Hara, Janssen, Rapp, & Morrison, 2010).
Testosterone
• Researchers found that, on average, married men and men living with a woman in a
committed relationship have lower testosterone levels than single, unpaired men of the
same age (M. McIntyre et al., 2006).
• The apparently obvious interpretation was that once a man established a lasting
relationship, he no longer needed to work so hard to seek a sexual partner, and his
testosterone levels dropped.
• Another study found that men’s testosterone levels did not change after marriage.
Instead, men with lower testosterone levels were more likely to marry than were men
with high testosterone levels (van Anders & Watson, 2006).
• Similar studies found that single women had higher testosterone levels than women with
a long-term partner, either homosexual or heterosexual (van Anders & Goldey, 2010)
• Both men and women with high testosterone levels are more likely
than average to seek additional sex partners, even after they marry
or establish a long-term relationship (M. McIntyre et al., 2006; van
Anders, Hamilton, & Watson, 2007).
• It has been shown that when women think about sex or anticipate
having sex, their testosterone levels increase temporarily (van
Anders, Brotto, Farrell, & Yule, 2009).
fl
• Decreases in testosterone levels generally decrease male sexual
activity. For example, castration (removal of the testes) generally
decreases a man’s sexual interest and activity (Carter, 1992).
• However, low testosterone is not the usual basis for impotence, the
inability to have an erection.
• After the end of a menstrual period, the anterior pituitary releases follicle-stimulating hormone
(FSH), which promotes the growth of a follicle in the ovary.
• Toward the middle of the menstrual cycle, the follicle builds up more and more receptors to FSH,
so even though the actual concentration of FSH in the blood is decreasing, its effects on the
follicle increase.
• The increased release of estradiol causes an increased release of FSH as well as a sudden
surge in the release of luteinizing hormone (LH) from the anterior pituitary.
• The remnant of the follicle (now called the corpus luteum) releases the
hormone progesterone, which prepares the uterus for the implantation of a
fertilized ovum.
• Toward the end of the menstrual cycle, the levels of LH, FSH, estradiol,
and progesterone all decline.
• If the ovum is not fertilized, the lining of the uterus is cast off
(menstruation), and the cycle begins again.
• The most widely used birth-control pill, the combination pill, containing
estrogen and progesterone, prevents the surge of FSH and LH that would
otherwise release an ovum.
• The periovulatory period, consisting of the days around the middle of the
menstrual cycle, is the time of maximum fertility and high estrogen levels.
• According to two studies, women not taking birth-control pills initiate more sexual
activity (either with a partner or by masturbation) during the periovulatory period
than at other times of the month (D. B. Adams, Gold, & Burt, 1978; Udry & Morris,
1968).
• According to another study, women rate an erotic video as more pleasant and
arousing if they watch it during the periovulatory period than if they watch it at
other times (Slob et al.,1996).
fl
Oxytocin
• Secreted by posterior pituitary gland.
• Oxytocin stimulates contractions of the uterus during delivery of a baby, and it stimulates
the mammary gland to release milk.
• Sexual pleasure also releases oxytocin, especially at orgasm (M. R. Murphy, Checkley,
Seckl, & Lightman, 1990).
• Blocking the release of oxytocin prevents that effect, so oxytocin is apparently responsible
for the calmness and lack of anxiety after orgasm (Waldherr & Neumann, 2007).
• A study found that women who had the highest oxytocin levels during pregnancy
spent the most time gazing at, vocalizing to, touching, and pleasurably interacting with
their infants after delivery (Feldman, Welle, Zagoory-Sharon, & Levine, 2007).
• They are also quicker to recognize blurry words on a screen, if those words refer to
pleasant social relationship words, such as love or kissing (Unkelbach, Guastella, &
Forgas, 2008).
Parental Behaviour
• A female mammal’s behavior changes in many ways when she becomes a mother.
• In addition to nursing and caring for the young, she eats and drinks more than usual, and
becomes less fearful and more aggressive, especially in defense of her young.
• Although the role of hormones is less central for humans, it is critical for maternal behavior in
other species.
• After a mother rat delivers her babies, she increases her secretion of estradiol and prolactin,
while decreasing production of progesterone (Numan & Woodside, 2010).
• Prolactin is necessary for milk production and certain aspects of maternal behavior, such as
retrieving the young when they wander away from the nest (Lucas, Ormandy, Binart, Bridges, &
Kelly, 1998).
• It also inhibits sensitivity to leptin, enabling the mother to eat far more than usual.
• The hormonal changes increase the mothers’ attention to their young after
delivery.
• Male prairie voles, which secrete much vasopressin, establish long-term pair bonds with
females and help rear their young.
• A male meadow vole, with much lower vasopressin levels, mates with a female and then
virtually ignores her.
• However, these little social isolates changed their behavior after researchers found a way
to increase activity of the genes responsible for vasopressin in the voles’ hypothalamus.
• Suddenly, they showed a strong preference for a recent mate and, if placed into the same
cage, they even helped her take care of her babies (M. M. Lim et al., 2004).
• If a female that has never been pregnant is left with some baby rats,
she ignores them at rst but gradually becomes more attentive.
• After about 6 days, the adoptive mother builds a nest, assembles the
babies in the nest, licks them, and does everything else that normal
mothers do, except nurse them.
• That is, humans are not the only species in which a mother can adopt
young without rst going through pregnancy.
fi
fi
• We might imagine that evolution would have equipped infants with pheromones
that elicit maternal behavior, but actually, their pheromones stimulate
aggressive behaviors that interfere with maternal behavior (Sheehan, Cirrito,
Numan, & Numan, 2000).
• For a mother that has just gone through pregnancy, this interference does not
matter because her hormones primed her medial preoptic area so strongly that
it overrides competing impulses.
• A female without hormonal priming, however, rejects the young until she has
become familiar with their smell (Del Cerro et al., 1995).
• In the early phase, hormones compensate for the mother’s lack of familiarity
with the young. In the later phase, experience maintains the maternal behavior
even though the hormones start to decline (Rosenblatt, 1970).
Evolutionary Interpretations of
Mating Behavior
• Part of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection was
that individuals whose genes help them survive will produce more
offspring, and therefore the next generation will resemble those with
these favorable genes.
• The idea is that men who acted these ways in the past propagated their
genes, and today’s men might have inherited genes that promote these
behaviors.
• In contrast, a woman can have no more than one pregnancy per 9 months,
regardless of her number of sex partners.
• A woman does sometimes gain from having multiple sex partners (Hrdy,
2000).
• If her husband is infertile, mating with another man could be her only way
of reproducing.
• Also, another sexual partner may provide aid of various sorts to her and
her children.
• In addition, she has the possibility of “trading up,” abandoning her rst
mate for a better one.
fi
What Men and Women Seek in a
Mate?
• Almost all people seeking a romantic partner prefer someone who is healthy,
intelligent, honest, and physically attractive.
• Typically, women have some additional interests that are less common for men.
• In particular, women are more likely than men are to prefer a mate who is likely to
be a good provider (Buss, 2000).
• Evolution would have favored any gene that caused women to seek good
providers.
• A woman is also much more likely to reject a man because of his smell
than a man is to reject a woman because of her smell (Herz & Inzlicht,
2002).
• One possible reason is that body odor relates to some of the same
genes that control the immune system, known as the major
histocompatibility complex.
• Male chimps usually prefer older (but still fertile) females, who tend to have a
higher social rank than younger females do (Muller, Thompson, &
Wrangham, 2006).
• Men remain fertile into old age, so a woman has less need to insist on youth.
• Women do prefer young partners when possible, but in many societies, only
older men have enough nancial resources to get married.
fi
Differences in Jealousy
• Traditionally, in most cultures, men have been more jealous of women’s in delities than
women have been of men’s in delities.
• If a man is to pass on his genes— the key point in evolution—he needs to be sure that
the children he supports are his own. An unfaithful wife threatens that certainty.
• A woman knows that any children she bears are her own, so she does not have the
same worry.
• Some cultures consider sexual in delity acceptable for both husband and wife; some
prohibit it completely for both; and some consider it more acceptable for the husband
than for the wife.
fi
fi
fi
• Most men and women who have actually dealt with an unfaithful
partner say they were more upset by their partner’s becoming
emotionally close to someone else than by the sexual affair (C. H.
Harris, 2002).
fi
fi
Evolved or Learned?
• The brain evolved, just like any other organ, and our behavioral
tendencies are a product of evolution.
Conclusion
fi