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Oral contraceptive administration,interfemale relationships,and sexual behavior inMacaca fascicularis
Authors:Carol A Shively PhD  Stephen B Manuck PhD  Jay R Kaplan PhD  Donald R Koritnik PhD
Institution:(1) Department of Comparative Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, 300 S. Hawthorne Road, 27103 Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA;(2) Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, 15260 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract:The effects of oral contraceptive administration on the social relationships of adult female cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) were examined. Ten females were administered ethinyl estradiol/ethynodiol diacetate (Demulen), 10 were administered ethinyl estradiol/norgestrel (Ovral), and 10 served as a control group. The monkeys lived in social groups of 5 females each, and patterns of social interaction and social status were recorded. Interfemale relationships were also observed when a vasectomized male was placed in each social group for 50 min, once/week. During the latter observations, preliminary data on the effects of oral contraceptive treatment on sexual interaction were also collected. In the absence of the male, interfemale agonistic interactions and time spent alone were influenced by social status but not by oral contraceptive treatment. Time spent in passive body contact, an affiliative state, was reduced by Ovral treatment. In the presence of the male, dominant females aggressively interfered with the sexual interactions of subordinates. This aggression resulted in the termination of a greater proportion of the sexual interactions of subordinates than dominants in the control group only, indicating suppression of this type of interaction by oral contraceptive treatment. Other effects included a decreased frequency of ejaculation with Ovral-treated females. These results suggest that oral contraceptives may suppress certain types of female agonistic behavior (e.g., in the context of mate competition) and some oral contraceptives may interfere with sexual activity. More broadly, these findings indicate that intrasexual competition for access to mates may occur in females as well as males. This study was supported in part by NICHD Contract #N01-HD-32800 and by Grant #HL14164 from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
Keywords:sexual behavior  oral contraceptives  Macaca fascicularis  intrasexual competition  dominance
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