Androgens and carotenoids play a fundamental role in the expression of secondary sex traits in animals that communicate information on individual quality. In birds, androgens regulate song, aggression, and a variety of sexual ornaments and displays,
whereas carotenoids are responsible for the red, yellow, and orange colors of the integument. Parallel, but independent, research lines suggest that the evolutionary stability of each signaling system stems from tradeoffs with immune function: androgens can be immunosuppressive, and carotenoids diverted to coloration prevent their use as immunostimulants. Despite strong similarities in the patterns of sex, age and seasonal variation, social function,
and proximate control, there has been little success at integrating potential links between the two signaling systems. These parallel patterns led us to hypothesize that testosterone increases the bioavailability of circulating carotenoids. To test this hypothesis, we manipulated testosterone levels of red-legged partridges Alectoris
rufa while monitoring carotenoids, color, and immune function. Testosterone treatment increased the concentration of carotenoids
in plasma and liver by >20%. Plasma carotenoids were in turn responsible for individual differences in coloration and immune response. Our results provide experimental evidence for a link between testosterone levels and immunoenhancing carotenoids that (i) reconciles conflicting evidence for the immunosuppressive nature of androgens, (ii) provides physiological grounds for a connection between two of the main signaling systems in animals, (iii) explains how these signaling systems can be evolutionary stable and honest, and (iv) may explain the high prevalence of sexual dimorphism in carotenoid-based coloration in animals.
J.B. was supported by a postdoctoral grant from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación y
Ciencia and the Isabel María López Martínez Memorial Scholarship.
L.P-R. was supported by a predoctoral grant from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia.
Financial support was provided by the Research Project PAI-02-006 of the Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha (J.V.) and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (G.R.B.).
Peer reviewed