Functional maturation of the gonads of Turkish hamsters under various photoperiods
Author(s) -
S. M. Hong
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
biology of reproduction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.366
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 1529-7268
pISSN - 0006-3363
DOI - 10.1095/biolreprod35.4.858
Subject(s) - biology , mesocricetus , hamster , photoperiodism , medicine , endocrinology , estrous cycle , reproduction , syrian hamsters , golden hamster , sexual maturity , rodent , period (music) , ecology , botany , physics , acoustics
The golden hamster, Mesocricetus auratus, is the only photoperiodic rodent to date that has been shown to fail to respond to inhibitory (i.e., short, less than 12.5 h/day) photoperiods until after pubertal onset. In other photoperiodic hamsters, mice, and voles, short photoperiods greatly retard gonadal maturation. The Turkish hamster, Mesocricetus brandti, is a photoperiodic rodent that as an adult is reproductively competent only on photoperiods of 15-17 h of light per day; photoperiods of less than 15 or greater than 17 h of light promote gonadal regression. In this report we addressed two questions: a) are prepubertal M. brandti photoperiodic, and b) if so, is gonadal maturation enhanced or suppressed by exposure to photoperiods of greater than 17 h of light per day? Turkish hamsters were raised on photoperiods of 12, 16, 20, or 24 (= LL) h of light per day. Testicular growth was retarded for 16 wk by 12L:12D. Very long days, 20L:4D, or LL did not retard testicular development. In females, pubertal onset, as indicated by first vaginal estrus, was delayed in young raised on 12L:12D and in 2 of 18 and 4 of 19 young raised on 20L:4D and LL, respectively. These results demonstrate that prepubertal Turkish hamsters are photoperiodic, but respond differently from adults to photoperiods greater than 17 h of light per day.
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