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The composition of host-associated microbial communities may correlate with the overall status of the host, including physiology and fitness. New bi-directional hypotheses suggest that sexual behaviors can shape, and be shaped by reproductive microbiomes, which may be particularly important for species with mating systems that feature strong sexual selection. These dynamics have been particularly understudied in female animals. Using 16S rRNA sequencing, we compared the cloacal microbiome of females and males from two socially polyandrous bird species that vary in the strength of sexual selection, Jacana spinosa (Northern Jacana) and J. jacana (Wattled Jacana). We hypothesized that the strength of sexual selection would shape cloacal microbial diversity, such that the more polyandrous J. spinosa would have a more diverse microbiome, and that microbiomes would be more diverse in females than in males. If the reproductive microbiome is indicative of competitive status, we also hypothesized that cloacal microbial diversity would be associated with competitive traits, including plasma testosterone levels, body mass, or weaponry. We found no differences in microbial alpha diversity between species or sexes, but we did find that microbial beta diversity significantly differed between species. We also found a positive relationship between microbial alpha diversity and testosterone in female J. spinosa. Future experiments are needed to explore the potential drivers of correlations between the cloacal microbiome and competitive phenotypes in socially polyandrous jacanas.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 12, 2026
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Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
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Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
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Sex is ubiquitous and variable throughout the animal kingdom. Historically, scientists have used reductionist methodologies that rely on a priori sex categorizations, in which two discrete sexes are inextricably linked with gamete type. However, this binarized operationalization does not adequately reflect the diversity of sex observed in nature. This is due, in part, to the fact that sex exists across many levels of biological analysis, including genetic, molecular, cellular, morphological, behavioral, and population levels. Furthermore, the biological mechanisms governing sex are embedded in complex networks that dynamically interact with other systems. To produce the most accurate and scientifically rigorous work examining sex in neuroendocrinology and to capture the full range of sex variability and diversity present in animal systems, we must critically assess the frameworks, experimental designs, and analytical methods used in our research. In this perspective piece, we first propose a new conceptual framework to guide the integrative study of sex. Then, we provide practical guidance on research approaches for studying sex-associated variables, including factors to consider in study design, selection of model organisms, experimental methodologies, and statistical analyses. We invite fellow scientists to conscientiously apply these modernized approaches to advance our biological understanding of sex and to encourage academ- ically and socially responsible outcomes of our work. By expanding our conceptual frameworks and methodo- logical approaches to the study of sex, we will gain insight into the unique ways that sex exists across levels of biological organization to produce the vast array of variability and diversity observed in nature.more » « less
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Synopsis What are the implications of misunderstanding sex as a binary, and why is it essential for scientists to incorporate a more expansive view of biological sex in our teaching and research? This roundtable will include many of our symposium speakers, including biologists and intersex advocates, to discuss these topics and visibilize the link between ongoing reification of dyadic sex within scientific communities and the social, political, and medical oppression faced by queer, transgender, and especially intersex communities. As with the symposium as a whole, this conversation is designed to bring together empirical research and implementation of equity, inclusion, and justice principles, which are often siloed into separate rooms and conversations at academic conferences. Given the local and national attacks on the rights of intersex individuals and access to medical care and bodily autonomy, this interdisciplinary discussion is both timely and urgent.more » « less
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Uncovering the genomic bases of phenotypic adaptation is a major goal in biology, but this has been hard to achieve for complex behavioral traits. Here, we leverage the repeated, independent evolution of obligate cavity-nesting in birds to test the hypothesis that pressure to compete for a limited breeding resource has facilitated convergent evolution in behavior, hormones, and gene expression. We used an integrative approach, combining aggression assays in the field, testosterone measures, and transcriptome-wide analyses of the brain in wild-captured females and males. Our experimental design compared species pairs across five avian families, each including one obligate cavity-nesting species and a related species with a more flexible nest strategy. We find behavioral convergence, with higher levels of territorial aggression in obligate cavity-nesters, particularly among females. Across species, levels of testosterone in circulation were not associated with nest strategy, nor aggression. Phylogenetic analyses of individual genes and co-regulated gene networks revealed more shared patterns of brain gene expression than expected by drift, but the scope of convergent gene expression evolution was limited to a small percent of the genome. When comparing our results to other studies that did not use phylogenetic methods, we suggest that accounting for shared evolutionary history may reduce the number of genes inferred as convergently evolving. Altogether, we find that behavioral convergence in response to shared ecological pressures is associated with largely independent gene expression evolution across different avian families, punctuated by a narrow set of convergently evolving genes.more » « less
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Synopsis Females of some species are considered sex-role reversed, meaning that they face stronger competition for mates compared to males. While much attention has been paid to behavioral and morphological patterns associated with sex-role reversal, less is known about its physiological regulation. Here, we evaluate hypotheses relating to the neuroendocrine basis of sex-role reversal. We refute the most widely tested activational hypothesis for sex differences in androgen secretion; sex-role reversed females do not have higher levels of androgens in circulation than males. However, we find some evidence that the effects of androgens may be sex-specific; circulating androgen levels correlate with some competitive phenotypes in sex-role reversed females. We also review evidence that sex-role reversed females have higher tissue-specific sensitivity to androgens than males, at least in some species and tissues. Organizational effects may explain these relationships, considering that early exposure to sex steroids can shape later sensitivity to hormones, often in sex-specific ways. Moving forward, experimental and correlative studies on the ontogeny and expression of sex-role reversal will further clarify the mechanisms that generate sex-specific behaviors and sex roles.more » « less
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Abstract Urbanization is one of the most extreme forms of land transformation and results in changes to ecosystems and species compositions. As a result, there are strong directional selection pressures compared to nearby rural areas. Despite a surge in research on the different selection pressures on acoustic communication in urban and rural areas, there has been comparatively little investigation into traits involved with visual communication. We measured the plumage of museum specimens of white-crowned sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys) from urban and adjacent rural habitats in San Francisco, CA, to assess the effects of divergent habitats on plumage. We found significant differences in dorsal plumage, but not crown plumage, between urban and rural populations that have been diverging over the past 100 years. Urban birds have increasingly darker and duller dorsal plumage, whereas rural birds in adjacent areas have plumage with richer hues and more color complexity. Our findings suggest a newly observed adaptation to urban environments by native species and suggest that many traits, in addition to acoustic signals, may be changing in response to urban selection pressures. Additional collections in urban areas are needed to explore likely divergences in plumage coloration between urban and rural environments.more » « less
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