| Literature DB >> 33936293 |
Maiko Roberto Tavares Dantas1, João Batista Freire Souza-Junior2, Thibério de Souza Castelo2, Arthur Emannuel de Araújo Lago1, Alexandre Rodrigues Silva1.
Abstract
Myomorphic and hystricomorphic rodents are vital for maintaining various ecosystems around the planet. This review enables a better understanding of how these rodents respond to environmental factors and adapt to climate adversities. Innumerable factors, such as photoperiod, rainfall, and temperature, can impair or contribute to the quality of rodent reproductive parameters. Prolonged animal exposure to high ambient temperatures alters thermoregulation mechanisms and causes testicular and ovarian tissue degeneration and hormonal deregulation. Photoperiod influences the biological circannual rhythm and reproductive cycles of rodents because it strongly regulates melatonin secretion by the pineal gland, which modulates gonadotropic hormone secretion. Rainfall quantity directly regulates the abundance of fruits in an ecosystem, which modulates the reproductive seasonality of species which are most dependent on a seasonal fruit-based diet. Species with a more diversified fruit diet have smaller reproductive seasonality. As such, habitats are chosen by animals for various reasons, including the availability of food, sexual partners, intra-and inter-specific competition, and predation. This knowledge allows us to monitor and establish management plans to aid in conservation strategies for wild rodent species.Entities:
Keywords: Rodentia; climate; reproductive physiology; seasonality; wildlife
Year: 2021 PMID: 33936293 PMCID: PMC8078862 DOI: 10.1590/1984-3143-AR2020-0213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Reprod ISSN: 1806-9614 Impact factor: 1.807
Figure 1Schematic design of how the main environmental elements influence the reproduction of rodents. In general, the more distant a region is from the equator, the greater the variations in temperature and rainfall between the seasons, thus representing the seasonality. Moreover, photoperiod is related to the presence/absence of light that causes variations in melatonin production by the pineal gland, which modulates the FSH and LH levels, resulting in the regulation of gonadal activity and reproductive seasonality. Rainfall refers to the precipitation that is intricately linked to the supply of water and food, which in some cases may cease the reproductive cycle if the habitat does not have an abundance and variety of resources throughout the year. Finally, the excessive and prolonged heat stress tends to increase body temperature, which decreases gonadal activity; however, some rodents can dissipate this heat through body regions that are usually rich in blood vessels and low in hair, such as the ears, paws, and tail.
Influence of different climatic factors on reproductive aspects of rodent species.
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| Male and female | Photoperiod | South Africa | This is a reproductive seasonal species restricted to the summer and fall months, in the south hemisphere. |
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| Male and female | Photoperiod | Southern Africa | Pregnant and lactating females were observed only during spring and summer, besides a significant increase in testicular volume, seminiferous tubule diameter and testosterone plasma concentration in males. |
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| Male | Photoperiod | South Africa | Both species exhibited significantly higher testicular mass when exposed to high photoperiod than during short light hours. |
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| Male and female | Rainfall and temperature | Saudi Arabia | This animal is a seasonal breeder that can breed opportunistically. Male and female correlate reproductive recrudescence to rainfall. Pregnancies occur in most seasons apart from the winter. |
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| Male | Temperature | Under laboratory conditions | Heat caused by high temperature cause damage to the testicles, such as testicular atrophy, presence of vacuolization and perforations in the seminiferous tubule epithelium, germ cell death. |
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| Female | Photoperiod | Under laboratory conditions | Female pups kept in groups of two matured at about 47 days when born into lengthening and 79 days when born into shortening day length. They kept under identical short-day conditions after weaning on day 20 of life. |
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| Female | Rainfall | Amazon rainforest | The precipitation of upland forest fruiting was positively correlated with precipitation, which was causally related to higher rates of pregnancy, lactation, and weaning of offspring. |
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| Male | Photoperiod | Under laboratory conditions | Rats held under photoperiods of ≥ 12 h of light/day showed increased growth, food intake and higher paired testes weight relative to rats held under photoperiods of ≤ 10 h of light/day. |
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| Male and female | Rainfall and temperature | Namibia | The ovarian activity increased at the end of the dry period and throughout the wet months. During the wet months, pregnant and lactating females were found, besides a increase of testicular mass relative to body mass, testicular volume, and seminiferous tubule diameter in males. |
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| Male | Reproductive seasonality | Argentina | Greater number of morphological defects was observed in the period of decreased gonadal activity (33.8%, winter) than in the activity period (7.8%, summer-autumn). The morphological characteristics of sperm undergo significant changes during their reproductive cycle. |
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| Male | Photoperiod | China | It was displayed a synchronous peak in gonadal activity with annual day length around summer solstice. The hypothalamic photoperiod genes studied regulate seasonal breeding in a natural rodent population. |
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| Male and female | Rainfall and temperature | French Guiana forest | The species tended to breed in the period corresponding to the largest supply of fruits from their diets. It was linked to the seasonal importance of fruits in diets, the most aseasonal species having the most diversified diet during the poor fruit season. |
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| Female | Temperature | Under laboratory conditions | The high temperature is responsible for suppression of ovarian function by decreasing the expression of steroidogenic enzymes, estrogen and gonadotropin receptors in the ovary. |
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