| Literature DB >> 3413338 |
T J Nicholls1, B K Follett, A R Goldsmith, H Pearson.
Abstract
Comparisons are drawn between the photoperiodically driven breeding cycles in "long-day" birds and "short-day" mammals, emphasizing the importance of photorefractoriness as a key regulator in the timing processes. It is argued that the two types of breeding cycle may not be so radically different as previously thought and, indeed the cycles may be strictly homologous. Evidence in support of this comes from the role of the thyroid glands in seasonality. In starlings and quail, thyroidectomy prevents refractoriness developing and the birds remain in breeding indefinitely under long days. If the processes underlying refractoriness are similar across species then thyroidectomy should greatly alter the ewe's breeding cycle. In two experiments, Welsh Mountain ewes were thyroidectomized in the summer during anoestrus and their subsequent periods of oestrus monitored under various daylengths. There was no effect of thyroidectomy on the time when oestrous cyclicity began in the Autumn but the onset of anoestrus was profoundly disrupted. All the ewes continued to cycle well beyond the end of the normal breeding season and a number have continued throughout the entire period of anoestrus.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3413338 DOI: 10.1051/rnd:19880304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Nutr Dev ISSN: 0181-1916