Animals (Jan 2021)

Divergent Seasonal Reproductive Patterns in Syntopic Populations of Two Murine Species in Southern Spain, <i>Mus spretus</i> and <i>Apodemus sylvaticus</i>

  • Diaa Massoud,
  • Miguel Lao-Pérez,
  • Esperanza Ortega,
  • Miguel Burgos,
  • Rafael Jiménez,
  • Francisco J. Barrionuevo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11020243
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 243

Abstract

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In most mammals with seasonal reproduction, males undergo testis regression during the non-breeding period. We performed a morphological, hormonal, functional, and molecular study of the testes of sexually inactive males of two species of murine rodents, the wood mouse, Apodemus sylvaticus, and the Algerian mouse, Mus spretus, in syntopic populations of southern Iberian peninsula. Both species reproduce during most of the year, but wood mice stop breeding in the summer whereas Algerian mice do it in winter. Sexually inactive males of A. sylvaticus show complete testis regression with reduced levels of serum testosterone and abnormal distribution of cell-adhesion molecules. Contrarily, inactive males of M. spretus maintain almost normal spermotogenesis despite a significant reduction of androgenic function. The lack of an evident explanation for the divergent seasonal breeding patterns found in southern populations of A. sylvaticus and M. spretus, compared with northern ones, implies that very subtle species/population-specific features and/or non-conspicuous environmental cues probably operate to determine their seasonal breeding pattern. These results also support the notion that multiple models of circannual testis variation are possible for different populations of the same species, showing that the mechanisms controlling seasonal reproduction are in fact very plastic and fast evolving.

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