Thyroxine treatment prevents the development of photosensitivity in european starlings (Sturnus vulgaris)
Autor: | W. E. Ivings, Arthur R. Goldsmith, M. S. Boulakoud |
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Rok vydání: | 1991 |
Předmět: |
photoperiodism
medicine.medical_specialty Gonadotropin RH biology Physiology Observation period Human physiology Intermediate level biology.organism_classification Biochemistry Endocrinology Sturnus Photosensitivity Internal medicine medicine Seasonal breeder Animal Science and Zoology Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics |
Zdroj: | Journal of Comparative Physiology B. 161 |
ISSN: | 1432-136X 0174-1578 |
DOI: | 10.1007/bf00257906 |
Popis: | In starlings, the breeding season is terminated by a state of photorefractoriness. Birds remain completely reproductively inactive as long as long days are maintained, and only exposure to short days restores photosensitivity. Two experiments investigated the role of different doses of thyroxine in the development of photosensitivity in castrated starlings. First, photorefractory castrated male starlings were moved from long (18L:6D) to short (8L:16D) days, and received in the drinking water either 1 or 10 mg · 1-1 thyroxine for the first 7 weeks of a 14-week observation period. Control birds regained photosensitivity after 5 weeks of short days, as signaled by a spontaneous increase in plasma LH, whereas the return to photosensitivity was delayed until weeks 7 and 9 in the 1- and 10-mg · 1-1 thyroxine-treated birds, respectively. In the second experiment, the effect of different doses of thyroxine was explored at the level of the hypothalamic Gn-RH neurosecretory neurones. The acquisition of photosensitivity in control birds transferred from long to short days was characterized by a marked increase in hypothalamic Gn-RH content (while long-day controls maintained low Gn-RH content). Doses of 10 and 20 mg · 1-1 of thyroxine completely prevented the return to photosensitivity, as seen through changes in either plasma LH concentrations or hypothalamic Gn-RH content, while a dose of 1 mg · 1-1 allowed a partial recovery of photosensitivity, as hypothalamic Gn-RH content increased to an intermediate level and the spontaneous rise in plasma LH occurred slowly but steadily. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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