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Olfaction in the Zebra Finch (Taeniopygia guttata): What Is Known and Further Perspectives
2018, Advances in the Study of BehaviorSteroid metabolism in the brain: From bird watching to molecular biology, a personal journey
2017, Hormones and BehaviorCitation Excerpt :At the end of my college years, I started a PhD project and quite naturally this research focused on birds. I was initially assigned a project attempting to determine the role of olfactory communication in the control of social behavior in ducks and I actually managed to collect experimental data suggesting the existence of pheromonal communication in ducks (Balthazart and Schoffeniels, 1979; Jacob et al., 1979) but this topic became recognized and matured only several decades later (e.g., (Hagelin et al., 2003; Bonadonna and Nevitt, 2004; Hagelin, 2007; Balthazart and Taziaux, 2009)). During my first year of PhD, I faced however a problem that I had not anticipated, even if it was obvious: ducks are seasonal breeders and testing the contribution of pheromones to the control of sexual behavior was only feasible during a few months each year which left me unoccupied for long periods of time.
Neuroendocrine Regulation of Reproductive Behavior in Birds
2017, Hormones, Brain and Behavior: Third EditionAnnual life-history dependent seasonal differences in neural activity of the olfactory system between non-migratory and migratory songbirds
2016, Behavioural Brain ResearchCitation Excerpt :In a mate choice experiment, the spotless starlings (Sturnus unicolor) have been found using chemical cues in sex discrimination of their conspecifics [13]. Also, differences in the uropygial oil-gland chemistry correlate with seasonal changes in the male sexual behavior in female domestic ducks, Anas platyrhynchos, and chicken, Gallus domesticus [14,15]. Further, migratory songbirds use olfactory cues for the orientation and navigational purposes during their long trans-continental flights.
The perfume of reproduction in birds: Chemosignaling in avian social life
2015, Hormones and BehaviorCitation Excerpt :In the seventies, a few experiments drove the attention of ornithologists to the role of olfaction in avian social interactions. For example, sexual differences in the chemical composition of the uropygial secretions of domestic ducks were detected before the nesting period (Jacob et al., 1979), which may explain the alteration of sexual behaviors observed in males that were made anosmic (Balthazart and Schoffeniels, 1979). But it is only at the beginning of 2000 that this idea received a new input when individual olfactory recognition was discovered in seabirds (Bonadonna and Nevitt, 2004; De Leon et al., 2003).
Male mate recognition via cuticular hydrocarbons facilitates sexual isolation between sympatric leaf beetle sister species
2014, Journal of Insect PhysiologyCitation Excerpt :It is likely that these differences are used for sex recognition by males as observed in C. cobaltinus (Peterson et al., 2007). So far the CHC profiles have been examined in 29 chrysomelid species (Supplemental Table S1; Dubis et al., 1987; Geiselhardt et al., 2009a,b, 2011; Jacob et al., 1979; Jacob and hanssen, 1986; Nelson et al., 2002; Nelson and Charlet, 2003; Peterson et al., 2007; Sugeno et al., 2006). In general, the major compounds in leaf beetles are saturated alkanes, which account for over 80% of their CHC profiles in most (25 out of 29) of reported species.
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Aspirant du Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique.