| Literature DB >> 16903478 |
Abstract
The domestic turkey hen is a seasonal breeder, requiring a period of short days to establish photosensitivity and a long day length to initiate egg production. The reproductive season is then limited by the onset of photorefractoriness (PR), which causes a decline, and then termination, of egg laying. In passerine birds, PR is programmed early in the reproductive season by the presence of thyroid hormones and a long photoperiod. High circulating prolactin (PRL) is thought to hasten the onset of PR. In a prior study, we reported that hens destined to have PR exhibited lower levels of thyroxine (T4) and PRL at certain points (weeks) following photostimulation than did hens destined to remain photosensitive (PS), a result opposite to what might be expected. The present study was conducted to further explore the possible relationship between circulating hormone levels and subsequent PR in the commercial turkey hen at times (days) closer to photostimulation than our previous study. Plasma levels of triiodothyronine (T3), T4, and PRL were compared in 2 subpopulations of hens identified retrospectively after 50 wk of egg production: A group of 17 hens that exhibited PR (mean onset = 27 wk of photostimulation) and a group of "good" layers that remained PS (mean production = 210 eggs/50 wk). Results showed no differences between groups in plasma T3 or T4 levels or in the T3:T4 ratio at -6, 0, 1, 3, and 7 d from photostimulation. Plasma PRL levels were significantly higher at 8 and 9 wk after photostimulation in hens that remained PS vs. those that became PR. We conclude that thyroid hormone levels around the time of photostimulation either are not actively related to programming of subsequent PR in turkeys or programming for PR in the turkey hen occurs later in the reproductive cycle than in passerine birds. We further conclude that hens that exhibit PR tend to have lower circulating PRL levels early in the reproductive season than hens that remain PS and lay at a relatively high rate.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16903478 DOI: 10.1093/ps/85.8.1457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Poult Sci ISSN: 0032-5791 Impact factor: 3.352