The effect of season on the induction of sexual behavior by estradiol in female rhesus monkeys.
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Rhesus monkeys housed in an outdoor environment are seasonal breeders, with ovulations and concomitant sexual behavior limited to the fall and winter months. To determine if there is a seasonal difference in the capacity of physiological levels of estradiol (E2) to induce sexual behavior in ovariectomized rhesus monkeys housed outdoors, subjects living in a social group were treated with subcutaneous E2 implants in a counter-balanced design during the nonbreeding season (May-July) and during the breeding season (September-November). Serum E2 levels were monitored by obtaining blood samples twice a week. Three levels of E2 were studied: baseline (less than 30 pg/ml), follicular (100 pg/ml), and periovulatory (200 pg/ml). Two of five adult males in the group were injected with human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) twice a week to insure that males with high testosterone levels were present during each season. Focal observations of behavior of 15 minutes' duration on each subject were conducted 5 days per week, with frequencies and durations of social, sexual, and solitary behaviors recorded. Concomitant 2-h group scans were made to record all occurrences of mounting behavior. Neither heterosexual serial mounting nor seminal plugs were ever observed in E2-treated females during the summer months. In contrast, copulation and seminal plugs were observed in subjects at both treatment levels during the fall. While E2-treated females engaged in homosexual mounting behavior during both summer and fall, E2 treatment resulted in heterosexual copulation only during the fall. Changes in patterns of social behavior paralleled changes in sexual behavior and were significantly affected by treatment and season, with more male-female interactions during the fall months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)