A series of experiments was undertaken to both discover and explore the causes of sexually dimorphic phenotypic asymmetries in infant and adult Mongolian gerbils. We found that (1) the order in which the eyes of individual gerbil pups opened varied with their gender; right eyes of female pups opened before left eyes, while left eyes of male pups opened before right eyes, and (2) the paw that adult gerbils held in the air while maintaining a species-typical tripedal stance varied with gender; female gerbils held their right paws in the air significantly more often than did male gerbils. Both order of eye opening and laterality of paw use while in a tripedal stance varied significantly as a function of the intrauterine position which subjects had occupied as fetuses. These data implicate exposure to testosterone as a mediator of the development of asymmetries exhibited by Mongolian gerbils.
When assuming their species-typical tripodal stance, male Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) use their right forepaw for support more frequently than do females. This experiment determined whether, as N. Geschwind and A. M. Galaburda (1987) have proposed, the direction of such sexually dimorphic lateral asymmetry of forelimb use is affected by perinatal exposure to testosterone (TP). It was found that male gerbils injected with TP when 4 days old were significantly less likely to rest on their right forepaw when in a tripodal stance than were their oil-injected siblings. Female gerbils injected with TP when 6 days old were more likely than oil-injected controls to use their right forepaws for support. The findings demonstrate effects of perinatal exposure to TP on handedness in gerbils and suggest that the relationship between TP exposure and asymmetrical forelimb use is not always as direct as Geschwind and Galaburda's model suggests.
When assuming a species-typical tripodal posture, female Mongolian gerbils most often rest on their left forepaws and hold their right forelimbs aloft; male gerbils most often do the reverse. This experiment examined effects of gonadectomy, both in infancy and in adulthood, on the sexually dimorphic asymmetry in forelimb use by Mongolian gerbils when maintaining a tripodal stance. In adulthood, both male and female gerbils that had been gonadectomized at birth reversed their forelimb use while in a tripodal stance: Gonadectomized males used their forelimbs as did sham-operated females, and gonadectomized females used their forelimbs as did sham-operated males. Gonadectomy in adulthood abolished the sexual dimorphism in forelimb use seen in sham-operated subjects. It was concluded that gonadal hormones have organizational as well as possible activational effects on adult patterns of forelimb use by gerbils.
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