|
|
||||||||
1 Department of Zoology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
1. Experiments were conducted with slate-colored juncos and white-throated sparrows to test the thesis that the dark period plays a definitive role in the photoperiodic response of these birds.
2. The results of the experiment using male juncos were as follows:
(a) Testes of birds on a short day (10 hours of light, 14 hours of darkness) underwent little or no development during the 8 weeks of the experiment.
(b) Exposure of other juncos to a long day (16 hours of light, 8 hours of darkness) during this same period resulted in their testes attaining full breeding condition.
(c) Experimental birds were placed on a light schedule which consisted of 8
hours of light followed by a dark period, the middle of which was interrupted by a second light period of 1
hours; thus they received a total (as in (a)) of 10 hours of light per 24-hour period, but dark periods were only 7 hours long. By the end of 8 weeks considerable testicular development had occurred among all males placed on this "interrupted-night" schedule. The testes of four birds had developed mature sperm (late stage VI or VII); the other two were somewhat less developed.
3. The response of white-throated sparrows placed under these same conditions was similar to that of the juncos.
4. The results show clearly that in the photoperiodic response of these birds there is a critically important dark-dependent phase. This dark-period dependence appears to be characteristic of all photoperiodic responses, in both plants and animals.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. D. Lees Some Aspects of Animal Photoperiodism Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol, January 1, 1960; 25(0): 261 - 268. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. WOLFSON Role of Light in the Photoperiodic Responses of Migratory Birds Science, May 22, 1959; 129(3360): 1425 - 1426. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
D. S. Farner, L. R. Mewaldt, and S. D. Irving The Roles of Darkness and Light in the Activation of Avian Gonads Science, September 25, 1953; 118(3065): 351 - 352. [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |