Society for Behavioral
Neuroendocrinology
Annual Meeting
Host: Arizona State
University
June
27-30, 2001
PROGRAM
June 27 (Wednesday):
Arrival and registration
Time to be announced: Pre-meeting workshop on the future of stress
research
(NOTE: located on the ASU campus. Bus transportation to be provided.)
Organizers: Bruce McEwen and Kathy Matt
Time to be announced: evening reception
__________________________________
DAY 1: JUNE 28 (THURSDAY)
Day 1 Morning:
8:15 Brief welcome
Symposium 1: Neuroendocrine-immune
interactions
Chair: Greg
Demas
8:30 Rae Silver (Columbia
University) Gonadal hormone effects
on brain mast cell migration
9:00 Joe Casto (Indiana University) Testosterone
and immune function in a songbird: direct and indirect effects
9:30 David Mann (Morehouse School of
Medicine) Effect of GnRH and seasonality
on immune function in primates
10:30 Greg Demas (Georgia State
University) You're getting on my nerves: sympathoadrenal
regulation of seasonal changes in immune function in rodents
11:00 Contributed papers
Chair: Catherine
Woolley
11:00 Staci
Bilbo and Randy Nelson (Johns Hopkins University and Ohio State University) Short day lengths attenuate the symptoms of infection in
Siberian hamsters
11:20 Deborah Drazen, Gregory Demas, Jill
Schneider, and Randy Nelson (Johns Hopkins University, Georgia State
University, Lehigh University, and Ohio State University) Leptin reverses the immunosuppressive effects of short days and 2-DG in
male Siberian hamsters
11:40 Sarah Woodley, Y.-M.
Chang, and M. J. Baum (Boston University) Ferrets apparently lack atypical glomeruli in the main olfactory bulb
12:00-1:30
Lunch
Day 1 Afternoon:
Symposium 2: Brain morphometry as a tool
for investigating the neural bases of behavior: advantages, limitations, and
alternatives
Chairs: Mike
Moore and Pierre Deviche
1:30 Eliot Brenowitz (University of
Washington) Brain morphometry and behavior in the
avian song control system
2:00 Christina Williams (Duke University)
Estrogens
and cognition: what's the evidence for a structure-function relationship?
3:00 Andy Bass (Cornell University) Fish
songs: temporal scaling of divergent vocal phenotypes for alternative male
reproductive morphs
3:30 Pauline Yahr (UC Irvine) Identifying
cell groups in the brain that regulate male sex behavior
4:00-7:00
Poster session I (numbers 1 through 51, see list at end of program)
5:00-7:00 Workshop for students and
postdocs: "Careers in Industry for Behavioral
Neuroendocrinologists" Speakers
TBA
7:30-9:00 Informal roundtable on brain
morphometry
__________________________________
DAY 2: JUNE 29 (FRIDAY)
Day 2 Morning:
Presidential Symposium: Humans, Hormones, and Sex Differences in
Behavior
Chair: Kim Wallen
8:30 Melissa Hines, (City University, London, UK.) Prenatal
androgen and gender role behavior in girls and boys from a longitudinal
population sample
9:00 Dennis McFadden (University of Texas
- Austin) Prenatal hormones, sexual orientation,
and the auditory system
9:30 Marcia Collaer (Middlebury College,
VT) Exploring a role for ovarian hormones in cognitive
development: Evidence from Turner syndrome
10:30 Sheri Berenbaum (Southern Illinois
University School of Medicine) Prenatal androgen effects on human social
behavior
11:00 Contributed papers
Chair: Elizabeth
Adkins-Regan
11:00 Amy Wisniewski,
Claude Migeon, Heino Meyer-Bahlburg, John Gearhart, Gary Berkovitz, Terry
Brown, and John Money (Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University, and
University of Miami) Degree and timing of prenatal androgen exposure is not
related to atypical gender identity in 46,XY intersex subjects with androgen
insensitivity, gonadal dysgenesis or congenital micropenis
11:20 Heino Meyer-Bahlburg,
C. Dolezal, S. W. Baker, A. Carlson, J. Obeid, M. Vogiatzi, and M. I. New
(NYSPI, Columbia University, New York Presbyterian Hospital, and Cornell
University) Does prenatal glucocorticoid replacement reduce behavioral
masculinization in girls with congenital adrenal hyperplasia?
11:40 Shiva
Gupta, Richmond Thompson, S. Orr, K. Miller, and S. Mills (Bowdoin College,
Harvard University, and MidCoast Hospital) Vasopressin
effects on social cognition in humans
12:00-1:30
Lunch
Day 2 Afternoon:
Symposium 4: Cellular and molecular
mechanisms of sexual differentiation of the brain
Chairs: Geert DeVries and Margaret McCarthy
1:30 Margaret McCarthy (University of
Maryland, Baltimore) Excitatory versus inhibitory GABA as a
major mediator of steroid-induced differentiation of the hypothalamus
2:00 Rich Simerly (Oregon Health
Sciences, Beaverton) Target
specific differentiation of sexually dimorphic forebrain connections
3:00 Christine Wagner (SUNY Albany) Sex
differences in progesterone receptor expression in the developing brain: a tale
of two nuclei
3:30 David Skuse (Institute of Child
Health, London UK) Sexual dimorphism and
autism: a review of potential genetic mechanisms
4:00-7:00
Poster session II (numbers 52 through 98, see list at end of program)
7:30 Panel discussion for students and
postdocs: "Strategies for Balancing Careers and Family: Not for Women
Only"
Panelists: Matthew Grober, Jill
Schneider, and other TBA
__________________________________
DAY 3: JUNE 30 (SATURDAY)
Day 3 Morning:
Symposium 5: Cell and molecular basis of
behavioral neuroendocrinology: a comparative approach
Chair: Nancy Wayne
8:30 Nancy Wayne (UCLA) Calcium
regulation of neurohormone secretion in the marine mollusk Aplysia
9:00 Pei-San Tsai (University of Colorado
at Boulder) Characterization of a novel molluscan
gonadotropin-releasing hormone system
9:30 Randy Hewes (Washington University) Making
a peppy fly:genetic analysis of neuropeptide signaling and behavior
10:30 Harold Zakon (University of Texas
at Austin) Behavior to ion channels: the view from
electric fish
11:00 Contributed papers
Chair: Rae
Silver
11:00 P. Gasser,
and M. Orchinik (Arizona State University) Corticosterone and vasopressin regulate protein kinase C signal
transduction in an amphibian brain
11:20 Lisa Belden, Ignacio Moore, Audrey
Hatch, Robert Mason, and Andrew Blaustein (Oregon State University and
University of Washington) The effects of UV-B radiation exposure on
activity and circulating corticosterone levels in roughskin newts
11:40 Matthew Lovern and Juli Wade
(Michigan State University) Testosterone and embryonic development in
lizards
12:00-1:30 Lunch
(12:30-1:15 Business Meeting)
Day 3 Afternoon:
Symposium 6: Neuroendocrinology of
ingestive behavior
Chairs: Nori
Geary and Jennifer Swann
1:30 Randy Seeley (University of
Cincinnati Medical School) The CNS melanocortin system in the
control of food intake and body weight: giving with one hand and taking with
the other
2:00 Per Sodersten (Karolinska Institute)
The
cause of eating disorders
3:00 Nori Geary (Weill Medical College of
Cornell University) Estrogenic control of meal size
3:30 Cecilia Bergh (Karolinska Institute)
The
treatment of eating disorders
4:00-7:00 Poster session III (numbers 99
through 149, see list at end of program)
8:00-12:00 BANQUET and announcement of
student poster awards
__________________________________
July 1 (Sunday): departure
1. Kauffman, A. S., and Zucker, I.
Gonadal
recrudescence in intermediate day lengths reflects loss of photoperiodic memory
in Siberian hamsters
2. Caldwell, H.
K., and Albers, H. E.
Vasopressin-induced
flank marking is not reduced in Syrian hamsters exposed to short photoperiods
3. Anand, S.,
Turek, F. W., and Horton, T. H.
4. Weiss, A. E., Orchinik, M., and Matt, K. S.
Glucocorticoid
receptor levels in the separation stress syndrome of male Siberian dwarf
hamsters (Phodopus sungorus)
5. Mintz, E. M.
Stress-induced
c-fos expression in the suprachiasmatic nucleus is not blocked by 8-OH-DPAT
6. Pak, T. R., Lynch, G. R., and Tsai, P.-S.
Differential
effects of GnRH on in vitro LH and
FSH secretion in testosterone and estrogen-treated male Siberian hamsters
7. Rodman, J. E., Helmreich, D. L., Holmer, H. K., and
Parfitt, D. B.
Two days of
controllable or uncontrollable stress does not inhibit mating in the male
Syrian hamster (Mesocricetus auratus)
8. Burgess, E., and Matt, K. S.
Gender differences
in the neuroendocrine response to stress in Siberian dwarf hamsters (Phodopus sungorus)
9. Remage-Healey, L., Romero, L. M., and Adkins-Regan, E.
Behavioral and physiological responses to
pair bond disruption in the zebra finch, Taeniopygia
guttata
10. Small, T. W., and Deviche, P.
Environmental
control of seasonal reproduction in a temporally variable breeder, the
Rufous-winged Sparrow, Aimophila carpalis
11. Schoech, S. J.
Nutrition and the timing of reproduction in a free-living songbird
12. Moore, I. T., Wada, H., Perfito, N., and Wingfield, J.
13. Hau, M.,
Wingfield, J. C., and Soma, K. K.
14. Sperry, T. S., and Wingfield, J. C.
Acute effects of fluoxetine
upon territorial aggression in male free-living American tree sparrows, Spizella arborea
15. Soma, K.
K., Schlinger, B. A., Wingfield, J. C., and Saldanha, C. J.
Brain aromatase
activity and aggression are reduced in molting songbirds
16. Hirschenhauser, K., Winkler, H., and Oliveira, R. F.
The ‘challenge hypothesis’ revisited:
control for phylogeny
17. Pilz, K. M., Quiroga, M., and Smith, H. G.
of European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) chicks
18.
Foerster, K., and Kempenaers, B.
Do high plasma levels of testosterone
make blue tit males more attractive?
19. Auger, C. J., Olesen, K. M., and Ball, G. F.
Nuclear
receptor coactivator expression in steroid receptor containing cells in
European starling brain
20. Maney, D.
L., and Ball, G. F.
Fos and ZENK
immunoreactivity in the preoptic area following copulation solicitation in
female white-throated sparrows
21. Absil, P., Braquenier, J. B., Balthazart, J., and
Ball, G. F.
Effects of
archistriatal lesions on the expression of appetitive and consummatory sexual
behavior in male quail
22. Balthazart,
J., Stamatakis, A., Bacola, S., Absil, P., and Dermon, C. R.
Anatomical specificity in the effects of
testosterone and lesions of the medial preoptic nucleus on 2-deoxyglucose
uptake in male quail brain
24. Amory, E.
A., and Rissman, E. F.
Mating induced neurogenesis in the adult
female
mouse olfactory bulb
25. Nagatani,
S., and Wood, R. I.
26. Simmons, D.,
and Yahr, P.
Posterodorsal
preoptic nucleus (PdPN) and posterodorsal medial amygdala (MeApd) cells that are
activated with ejaculation: additional
projections and presence of nitric oxide synthase (NOS)
27. Harding, S. M., and McGinnis, M. Y.
Testosterone propionate in the VMN of the
hypothalamus is sufficient to restore partner preference in castrated male rats
28. Roselli, C. E., Cross,
E., Poonyagariyagorn, H. K., and
Stadelman, H. L.
Role of aromatization in anticipatory and consummatory
aspects of sexual behavior in male rats
29. Cooke, B.
M., Jordan, C., and Breedlove, S. M.
The effect of
androgen metabolites on sexual arousal and neuronal phenotype in the medial
amygdala
30. Balfour, M.
E., Yu, L., and Coolen, L. M.
Activation of ventral tegmental neurons
following sexual behavior in male rats
31. Truitt, W.
A., and Coolen, L. M.
Ejaculation-induced
neural activation in lumbar spinal cord of the rat.
32. Wells, A.
B., and Coolen, L. M.
Lumbar spinal cord efferents directly
contact thalamic neurons that project to MPOA or BNST
33. Braham, C. S., Sato, S., and Hull, E. M.
Co-localization of
Fos and NOS after copulation
34. Sato, S., and Hull, E. M.
Co-localization of
estrogen receptor a and
nitric oxide synthase in the medial preoptic area of male rats
35. Dominguez, J. M., Smith, D. J., Faulring, C. S., and Hull, E. M.
Stimulation of the
medial amygdala induces medial preoptic dopamine release: implications for male sexual behavior
36. Smith, D. J., Dominguez, J. M., and Hull, E. M.
Reversal of sexual
satiety by a 5-HT2 receptor antagonist
37. Murphy, A. Z., and Marson, L.
Identification of
neural circuits involved in female sexual response: a virus and anterograde tracing study
38. Calizo, L. H., and Flanagan-Cato, L. M.
Estrogen alters spine density on female
rat ventromedial hypothalamic neurons (VMH) that project to the periaqueductal
gray (PAG)
39. Orikasa, C., Hayashi, S., McEwen, B. S., and Sakuma, Y.
Sex difference in
ERb expression in the
anteroventral periventricular nucleus of the rat preoptic area
40. Luine, V., Ferguson, D., Kondo, Y., and Sakuma, Y.
Differential activation of
dopamine in brain areas during paced sex
41. Cushing, B.
S., Klein, D., Hoffman, G. E., Carter, C. S., Le, W. W., and De Vries, G. J.
42. Lehmann, M.
L., and Erskine, M. S.
Spaced NMDA infusions into the mAMYG
increase the occurrence of pseudopregnancy (PSP) in intact cycling female rats
43.
Khalil, M., Asarian, L., Silverman, A. J., and Silver, R.
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone in rat
brain mast cells
44. Mills, R. H., Sohn, R. K., and Micevych, P. E.
Effects of neuropeptide Y
on steroid activation of m-opioid
receptor and neuropeptide Y-Y1 receptor in the hypothalamus in female rats
45. Pedersen, C. A., and Boccia, M. L.
Large changes in MPOA and
VMH receptor binding during shift from oxytocin initiation to maintenance of
progesterone-induced female sexual receptivity
46. Pedersen, C. A., and Boccia, M. L.
Oxytocin reverses
vasopressin inhibition of female sexual receptivity
47.
Mahoney, M., and Smale, L.
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and
gonadotropin releasing hormone immunoreactive cells in diurnal grass rats
48. Dailey, M.
J., Koch, K. A., Daniels, D., Miselis, R. R., and Flanagan-Cato, L. M.
Intrahypothalamic injection of
pseudorabies virus (PRV) does not reduce the number of estrogen receptor a (ER)-immunoreactive cells
49.
Caldwell, J. D., Hoefle, S., Englof, I., Mott, P., and Morris, M.
Behavioral and physiological
actions of sex hormone binding globulin in brain: evidence of receptors
50.
Witt, D. M., and Mitrani, P. A.
51. Rudick, C.N., and Woolley, C. S.
Tamoxifen
effects on phasic estradiol-induced activation of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal
cells
52. Fane, B., Brook, C., and Hines, M.
Gender role
behavior and targeting ability in children with congenital adrenal hyperplasia
53. Brown, W.
M., Hines, M., Fane, B., and Breedlove, S. M.
54. Brown, W.
M., Finn, C., and Breedlove, S. M.
55.
Mason, J. M., Bader, C. M., Johnston, J. D., Wingate, A. E., Broussard, J. R.,
Suire, J. G., Laubscher, M. J., and Lynch, C. S.
Gonadal steroid regulation of
learning and memory in young women across the menstrual cycle
56.
Bader, C. M., Mason, J. M., Johnston, J. D., Wingate, A. E., Broussard, J. R.,
Suire, J. G., Laubscher, M. J., and Lynch, C. S.
Gonadal steroid regulation of
learning and memory in young women taking oral contraceptives
57. Newman, M.
L., and Josephs, R. A.
Baseline
testosterone moderates cognitive performance under conditions of stereotype
threat
58. Marriott,
L.K., Hauss-Wegrzyniak, B., Benton, R.S., Vraniak, P.D., and G.L. Wenk
The role of
estrogen and chronic brain inflammation in Alzheimer’s disease
59. Traustadóttir, T., Bosch, P., and Matt, K. S.
Neuroendocrine
stress responses: effect of gender
60. Zehr, J. L., Van Meter, P., and Wallen, K.
Sex and ovulation
at puberty--a foregone conclusion?
61. Phoebus, E., Mitz, A., Pohida, T., Pursley, R., Parjevic, S., Van
Rooy, A., and Suomi, S.
Simultaneous physiological and behavioral
measures in male and female rhesus monkeys (Macaca
mulatta) during reproductive activity
62. Sousa, M. B. C., Silva, H. P. A., and Otta, E.
Differences in
the onset of maturation of hypothalamic pituitary-testis axis and responses to
pairing in adult common marmoset (Callithrix
jacchus) males
63. Tannenbaum,
P. L., Ferris, C. F., Snowdon, C. T., King, J. A., Ziegler, T. E.,
Schultz-Darken, N. J., Duong, T. Q., Olson, D. P., Ludwig, R., Wu, Z.,
Sullivan, J., and Vaughan, J. T.
Male marmosets
differentiate sexually relevant olfactory cues during functional brain imaging
64. Guard, H. J., Newman, J. D., and Roberts, R. L.
Opiate facilitation
of social play in common marmosets
65. Cavigelli, S. A., Levash, W., Dubovick, T., Pitt, A., and Jolly, A.
Social
dominance and fecal cortisol levels in non-communally-breeding prosimian primate
females
66.
Wommack, J. C., and Delville, Y.
Chronic stress during puberty accelerates
the development of aggressive behavior
67. Jasnow, A. M., and Huhman, K. L.
Conditioned
defeat is blocked by antagonism of corticotropin-releasing hormone receptors in
the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis
68. Scordalakes,
E. M., and Rissman, E. F.
Estrogen receptor-alpha regulates
aggression and gender recognition in C57BL/6J male mice
69. Razzoli,
M. I., Valsecchi, P., Carter, S., and Cushing, B.
Hormonal regulation
of agonistic and affiliative
behaviors in female Mongolian gerbils
70. Oyegbile,
T., and Marler, C. A.
The winner effect and testosterone levels
in Peromyscus mice
71. Demas, G. E., Huhman, K. L., Bartness, T. J., and Jasnow, A. M.
Melatonin mediates short-day inreases in
aggression of
male Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus)
72. Korzan, W.
J., Summers, T. R., and Summers, C. H.
Aggression: toward a reflected image or live combat
73. Weiss, S.
L., and Moore, M. C.
Effect of testosterone and progesterone
on male aggression in the tree lizard
74. Smith, L. C., and John-Alder, H. B.
Hormones, behavior, and coloration in
dominant and subordinate male lizards (Sceloporus
undulatus) during continuous and intermittent staged encounters
75. Amateau, S. K., Alt, J. J., and McCarthy, M. M.
An
estradiol-mediated mechanism of astrocyte-to-neuron communication involving
prostaglandin-E2 in the perinatal preoptic area
76. Auger, A. P., Perrot-Sinal, T. S.,
Auger, C. J., and McCarthy, M. M.
Differential expression of nuclear
receptor co-activators in neonatal male and female rat brain
77. Nuñez, J. L., Alt, J., and McCarthy, M. M.
Neonatal muscimol
has deleterious effects on rat hippocampus: effect of sex and hormones
78. Perrot-Sinal, T. S., Auger, A. P., and McCarthy, M. M.
A sexually
dimorphic response to GABA in neonatal brain is mediated by calcium influx
79. Sickel, M. J., and McCarthy, M. M.
Hormone and
neurotransmitter modulation of calbindin-D28k expression in the neonatal
hypothalamus
80. Kudwa, A.E.;
Schank, J; Honda, S-I; and Rissman, E.F.
Aromatase gene modulates sex differences
in progesterone receptor induction by estradiol
81. Pfau, J. L., Quadros, P. S., De Vries, G. J., and Wagner, C. K.
Progesterone receptor expression in the
developing hypothalamus:
a species difference in the hormonal
regulation of sex differences
82. Lopez, V., Nakayama, A. Y., and Wagner, C. K.
Transient
progesterone receptor immunoreactivity in the developing rat neocortex
83. Palanza, P.,
Howdeshell, K., Parmigiani, S., and vom Saal, F. S.
Behavioral effects of prenatal exposure
to the environmental estrogen bisphenol A in mice are influenced by endogenous
sex hormones during fetal development
84. Pych, J. C., Webb, S., and Juraska, J. M.
Peripubertal
estrogen influences the myelination of the rat corpus callosum
85. van
Eerdenburg, F. J. C. M., and Verhoeven, H.
The influence of
environmental stress around puberty on fertility in dairy cattle: possible
relations with sexual differentiation ?
86. Xu, J., and Arnold, A. P.
Expression of sex
chromosome genes in mouse brain
87. Carruth, L. L., Ramachandran, B., McClive, P., Sinclair, A., and Arnold, A. P.
Sex differences in
gene expression in the hatchling zebra finch brain
88. McMunn, K. A., and Katz, L. S.
89. deCatanzaro, D., Vella, E. S., and
Muir, C.
17b-estradiol
in males' urine is elevated by exposure to females and diminished by sexual
satiety
90.
Kondo, Y., Watanabe, M., and Sakuma, Y.
Ovarian hormones in females
regulate paced mating and sexual preference of male and female rats
91. Jenkins, W.
J., and Becker, J. B.
Sexual
behavior that occurs at the female rat’s preferred pacing interval is
reinforcing
92. Cameron, N.,
and Erskine, M. S.
Adrenalectomy enhances the acute
prolactin surge induced by mating in ovariectomized estrogen treated rats, and
causes early onset of the nocturnal surge
93. Imwalle, D.
B., and Rissman, E. F.
Neonatal estradiol benzoate treatment
improves spatial learning in adult female but not male mice
94. McGowan, P.
O., and Williams, C. L.
95.
Wersinger, S. R., Lolait, S. J.,
O'Carroll, A.-M., and Young, W. S. III
Deficits in
social memory in male vasopressin 1b receptor knockout mice
96. Conrad, C.
D., MacMillan, D. D., McKissick, J. P., Fuchs, R. A., and Jackson, J. L.
Fear conditioning to context and tone is
enhanced by chronic corticosterone administration and this effect is attenuated
by amygdala inactivation or lesion
97. Briones-Aranda, A., Lopez-Rubalcava, C., and Picazo, O.
Forced swimming induces changes in anxiety levels of mice
98.
Woodson, J. C., Park, C. R., and Diamond, D. M.
Exposure
to a cat produces complete retrograde amnesia in rats
POSTER
SESSION III: SATURDAY JUNE 30, 4:00 – 7:00 PM
99. Maldonado,
T., and Tsai, P.-S.
Immunocytochemical
localization of GnRH in the molluscan central and peripheral nervous system
100. Morin, S.,
and Zakon, H.
Cloning of neural sex steroid receptors
in two sexually dimorphic, congeneric species of weakly electric fish
101. Semsar, K.,
and Godwin, J.
Social and
gonadal influences on arginine vasotocin expression in a coral reef fish
102. Grober, M. S., Watkins, K. K., and Canario, A.
Effects of
androgens on AVT mRNA expression in the POA of a sex-reversing fish
103. Marxer-Miller, S., Carlisle, S., Canario, A., Oliveira, R., Carneiro, L., and Grober, M.
104.
Knapp, R., Marchaterre, M. A., and Bass, A. H.
Relationship between courtship behavior
and steroid hormone levels in parental male plainfin midshipman fish
105. Forlano, P.
M., Deitcher, D. L., and Bass, A. H.
Distribution
of aromatase mRNA in the brain and gonads of a polymorphic vocal teleost
Effects of
the hypothalamic 5-HT, GABA, and NMDA systems in the behavioral
thermoregulation of female tilapia
107. Ros, A. F. H., Canario, A. V. M., and Oliveira, R. F.
Partner availability affects male
strategies and hormone levels in a tilapia with variable mating strategies (Sarotherodon galilaeus)
108. Crespi, E.
The importance of
maternal effects on offspring survival in the woodland salamander, Plethodon cinereus
109.
Jessop, T.
Ecological interactions modify daily
profiles of melatonin and corticosterone in a crocodile, marine turtle and a
toad
110. Jennings, D. H., Weiss, S. L., and Moore, M. C.
Ontogenetic
changes in embryonic yolk steroid content in tree lizards: transfer from the
developing embryo to the yolk?
111. O'Bryant,
E. L., and Wade, J.
Testosterone
regulation of behavior but not brain morphology in the green anole lizard
112. Krohmer, R. W., and Balthazart, J.
Co-localization
of aromatase and nitric oxide synthase in the forebrain of the red-sided garter
snake
113. Schuett, G. W., Repp, R. A., Tayor, E. N., DeNardo, D. F., Van Kirk, E. A., and Murdoch, W. J.
Plasma sex steroid
levels of wild western diamondback rattlesnakes (Crotalus atrox) during
winter
114. Schuett, G.
W., O'Leile, J. K., Hardy, D. L., Greene, H. W., Van Kirk, E. A., and Murdoch,
W. J.
Rattlesnake
species with contrasting breeding systems show differences in seasonal profiles
of sex steroids
115. Schuett, G.
W., Taylor, E. N., Van Kirk, E. A., and Murdoch, W. J.
Effect of
temperature and storage time on stability of sex steroids in blood from a
squamate reptile
116. Schuett, G. W., Carlisle, S. L., Holycross, A.T.,
O'Leile, J., Hardy, D. L., Van Kirk,
E. A., and Murdoch, W. J.
The breeding system of Mojave
rattlesnakes (Crotalus scutulatus): timing of mating, sex
steroids, spermatogenesis, and sexual segment cycle of the kidney in males
117. Aragona, B. J., Curtis, J. T., Davidson, A. J., Wang, Z., and
Stephan, F. K.
118. Blum, R. M., Scott, D. K., and Schneider, J. E.
119.
Buckley, C. A., and Schneider, J. E.
120.
Szymanski, L. A., Zhou, D., and Schneider, J. E.
Effects of fourth ventricle glucose
utilization on estrous cyclicity in Syrian hamsters
121. Abizaid, A., and Woodside, B. C.
Food restriction and the suppression of the estrogen-induced
LH surge during lactation: role of progesterone receptors
122. Chu, L.,
and Wood, R. I.
123. Day, D. E., Mintz, E. M., and Bartness, T. J.
Diet choice
increases food hoarding, food intake and pup survival in lactating hamsters
124. Preston, S. D., Raber,
J., and Jacobs, L. F.
A stress-based mechanism
for food-storing decisions in Merriam's kangaroo rats
125. Temple, J. L., and Rissman, E. F.
Glucose is
necessary, but not sufficient for re-feeding induced restoration of mating
behavior
126. Wynne-Edwards, K. E.
Plant defenses against
herbivory as predictors of endocrine disruptor susceptibility: how shall we
test the hypotheses?
127. Strader, A. D., and Buntin, J. D.
Agouti gene-related
protein (AGRP) stimulates food intake in the ring dove and may mediate
prolactin-induced hyperphagia
128. Ruscio, M. G., and
Adkins-Regan, E.
C-fos
expression during maternal behavior in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica)
129. Ruscio, M. G., Carroll, J., and Adkins-Regan, E.
Parental behavior in male Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica)
130. Sockman, K. W., Schwabl, H., and Sharp, P. J.
Changes in plasma
prolactin and testosterone concentrations associated with the transition from
sexual to parental activity in male American kestrels
131. Roberts, R. L., Sanchez, I. M., Jenkins, K. T., and Newman, J. D.
The role of
prolactin in alloparental behavior of common marmosets (Callithrix j. jacchus)
132. Reeder, D.
M., Mendoza, S. P., Schradin, C., Mason, W. A., and Anzenberger, G.
Behavioral
and hormonal components of paternal care in the monogamous titi monkey (Callicebus moloch)
133.
González-Mariscal, G., Gallegos, J. A., Beyer, C., and Rosenblatt, J. S.
Contribution
of suckling to maintaining and terminating rabbit maternal behavior
134. Popeski, N., and Woodside, B.
135. Olazabal, D. E., Rosenblatt, J. S., and Morrell, J. I.
Dopamine (DA)
and serotonin (5-HT) content and metabolism in the circuit supporting maternal
behavior (MB) in rats
136. Lonstein, J. S., Dominguez, J. D., Putnam, S. K., De Vries, G. J., and Hull, E. M.
Intracellular
preoptic dopamine and serotonin during pregnancy and lactation in rats
Aromatization
of testosterone to estradiol is an important mechanism of paternal behavior in
the California mouse
139. Khatib, S. S., and Young, L. J.
Changes in prolactin and prolactin
receptor expression in response to pup exposure in the biparental prairie vole
140. Lim, M. M., Insel, T. R., and Young, L. J.
The ventral
pallidum in the monogamous prairie vole:
neuroanatomy and activity during mating
141. Curtis, J.
T., Liu, Y., and Wang, Z.
142. Fowler, C. D., Liu, Y., Ouimet, C.,
and Wang, Z.
143. Liu, Y.,
Curtis, J. T., and Wang, Z.
Pair bond formation
in male prairie voles is regulated by vasopressin in the lateral septum
144. Mogekwu,
N., Carter, C. S., Hoffman, G. E., Le, W. W., and Cushing, B. S.
145. Okorie, U., and Cushing, B. S.
Neonatal
testosterone affects the ability of arginine vasopressin to stimulate partner
preference in adult male prairie voles
146. Dean, S. M., and Vandenbergh, J. G.
Prenatal exposure to
antiandrogenic or estrogenic compounds
alters monogamous behavior in pine voles (Microtus
pinetorum)
147. Bales, K. L., and Carter, C. S.
Neonatal treatment
with oxytocin affects selective sociality in male prairie voles
148. Bales, K. L.,
Abdelnabi, M., and Carter, C. S.
Neonatal injections affect reproductive
parameters in male prairie voles
149. Harder, J. D., He, Y., Pizza, N., and Fadem, B. H.
Luteinizing hormone response to pairing
in gonadectomized, estradiol-treated female and male gray short-tailed opossums
(Monodelphis domestica)