The endangered Amargosa River pupfish (Cyprinodon nevadensis amargosae) lives in Death Valley, where different populations of the species live in total isolation from one another in tiny permanent pools and short stream segments (Lema and Nevitt 2004). Although these populations have been separated from one another for only 400 to 4000 years, males in some places aggressively defend territories and court females drawn to them, while males in other populations are not aggressive toward one another and do not defend territories. How could these changes occur so rapidly? How might you establish experimentally that the hormone arginine vasotocin (AVT) decreases aggressive behavior in pupfish? If the hormone does lower aggression in this species, what predictions could you make about AVT or about AVT receptor protein differences between territorial and nonterritorial males of the same species? please don't write from any online source
The endangered Amargosa River pupfish (Cyprinodon nevadensis amargosae) lives in Death Valley, where different populations of the species live in total isolation from one another in tiny permanent pools and short stream segments (Lema and Nevitt 2004). Although these populations have been separated from one another for only 400 to 4000 years, males in some places aggressively defend territories and court females drawn to them, while males in other populations are not aggressive toward one another and do not defend territories. How could these changes occur so rapidly? How might you establish experimentally that the hormone arginine vasotocin (AVT) decreases aggressive behavior in pupfish? If the hormone does lower aggression in this species, what predictions could you make about AVT or about AVT receptor protein differences between territorial and nonterritorial males of the same species?
please don't write from any online source
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