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by Danika Painter
A group of children are busy playing in the park. They look up as a tough-looking boy approaches. "Hey, this is my playground!" he says with a nasty smirk. "You'd better get outta here now or you'll be sorry!" The other children flee in search of another place to play. Every playground has its bullies. Why do some people's instincts tell them to fight, and other people would rather just run away? Many animals behave the same way. Biologists at Arizona State University hope that by learning more about animal behavior, they will also be able to understand why people act the way they do. Michael Moore is a professor of biology and an expert on animal behavior. He and others in his laboratory think that hormones are part of the answer.
One of Moore's discoveries is that the hormones testosterone and progesterone make the male tree lizard morphs different. When they are babies, orange-blue tree lizards have lots of testosterone and progesterone. Orange males have much less. Because their hormone levels are different, the two types of males develop differently. High levels of these hormones cause males to develop orange-blue dewlaps, and think like fighters. In fact, Moore can change a timid orange male into a feisty orange-blue male by increasing its testosterone or progesterone levels. If hormones change the way a tree lizard's dewlap looks, do they also change its brain? Moore's research team is now doing experiments to find out whether orange-blue males' brains look different from those of orange males. They are particularly interested in the areas in the brain that control aggressive behavior. If these areas do look different, then maybe tree lizards can teach us something about how hormones affect the mysterious workings of the mind.
Here are some other places to read and learn about tree lizards and reptiles. On the Web: There are many sites on the web, but their web addresses often change. It is best to look for them using a search engine like HOTBOT using the key words reptiles, lizards, tree lizards. Books: Stebbins, Robert C. 1985 Peterson Field Guides: Western Reptiles and Amphibians. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.
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