Hasumi, M.: Prolactin-based "water-drive theory" in migratory salamanders: some disprovable data. Current Herpetology (Japan, International) 26(2): 107-116, December 2007. doi: 10.3105/1881-1019(2007)26[107:PWTIMS]2.0.CO;2

Abstract: To reconsider a classic theory that prolactin induces water-drive behavior in migratory salamanders (i.e., prolactin-based water-drive theory), I showed, with a brief review of past references, some disprovable data on the basis of "migratory activity type" and "mucus secretion" in the hynobiid salamanders, Hynobius hidamontanus and Salamandrella keyserlingii. This theory could not explain fall immigrations toward terrestrial hibernacula unrelated to mating in S. keyserlingii. Likewise, literature review indicated that it also could not explain breeding immigrations toward dry pond basins in Ambystoma opacum and toward terrestrial nest-sites adjacent to the water in Tylototriton (Echinotriton) andersoni. Mucus that was secreted from dermal mucous glands, a target organ for prolactin, was absent on the skin of both fall-nonbreeding and spring-breeding immigrants of S. keyserlingii. In the context of existence of ecological and physiological examples against the prolactin-based water-drive theory, which have been so far neglected in endocrinological studies, it is conclusively necessary to determine plasma prolactin concentrations in salamanders just before entering the water.


Hasumi, M.: Erratum. Prolactin-based "water-drive theory" in migratory salamanders: some disprovable data. Current Herpetology (Japan, International) 27(1): 47, June 2008.

ERRATUM

Prolactin-based "Water-drive Theory" in Migratory Salamanders: Some Disprovable Data

Masato HASUMI

Biological Institute, Faculty of Science, Niigata University, Niigata 950-2181, JAPAN

This paper, published in the December 2007 issue (vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 107-116), involves an error (p. 112, column 2, paragraph 2, lines 18-25). The author would like to correct this error as follows.

Original
Of the 190 fall immigrant individuals captured during September-October of 1995, 1996, and 1997, 186 (139 males and 47 females: i.e., all but the two males and two females captured during September-October [see above]) showed mucus secretion and the bias was statistically significant (AC = 0.021, P < 0.001).

Corrected
Of the 190 fall immigrant individuals captured during September-October of 1995, 1996, and 1997, 186 (139 males and 47 females: i.e., all but the two males and two females captured during September-October [see above]) showed no mucus secretion and the bias was statistically significant (AC = 0.021, P < 0.001).


Copyright 2008 Masato Hasumi, Dr. Sci. All rights reserved.
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