Mr. Gorman, SEASONAL ADAPTATIONS OF SIBERIAN HAMSTERS .1. ACCELERATED GONADAL ANDSOMATIC DEVELOPMENT IN INCREASING VERSUS STATIC LONG-DAY LENGTHS, Biology of reproduction, 53(1), 1995, pp. 110-115
Studies of rodent photoperiodism have almost exclusively employed fixe
d photoperiods with abrupt shifts in day length (DL) of 4-8 h effected
in a single day. Because DLs in nature change continuously and increm
entally, rates of gonadal and somatic development were compared in the
present study in hamsters exposed to gradually increasing vs. fixed D
Ls. Male hamsters gestated in 12 h light/day (12L) and exposed to DLs
that increased gradually from 12L to 15.5L (experiment 1) or from 12L
to 16L (experiment 2) weighed more and had larger gonads than did hams
ters gestated and maintained from birth in a DL of absolutely greater
duration (16L). Gradual increases in DL from 10L to 12L also resulted
in more rapid somatic development than did gestation and maintenance i
n a static 12L photoperiod. The pattern of gradual increases in DL was
not sufficient to accelerate development at all DLs but was effective
in the range of 12L to 19L. Siberian hamsters are responsive to the p
attern of photoperiodic change; the maximally stimulatory photoperiodi
c stimulus is not a fixed long day, but is instead increasing DLs, eve
n those with absolutely shorter photophases; short gestational DLs pot
entiate the effects of longer postnatal DLs. The relations heretofore
elaborated between fixed DLs and physiological responses differ from t
hose obtained with more natural photoperiodic transitions.