H. Underwood, THE CIRCADIAN-RHYTHM OF THERMOREGULATION IN JAPANESE-QUAIL .1. ROLE OF THE EYES AND PINEAL, Journal of comparative physiology. A, Sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology, 175(5), 1994, pp. 639-653
Japanese quail exhibit a robust circadian rhythm in body temperature.
This rhythm is readily entrainable by 24 h light-dark (LD) cycles and
persists under constant conditions. Because both the pineal organ and
the eyes have been implicated as major components of the circadian sys
tem of birds, the role of these organs in generating the rhythm of bod
y temperature was investigated. Pinealectomy, when performed alone, ha
d little effect on the body temperature rhythm of quail either under L
D or under constant darkness (DD). Most birds subjected to optic nerve
section alone remained rhythmic in DD although the ''robustness'' of
the rhythm was decreased, and 25% became arrhythmic. Birds subjected t
o both pinealectomy and optic nerve section behaved similarly to birds
subjected to optic nerve section alone. However, complete eye removal
, when performed alone or in combination with pinealectomy, caused all
birds to become arrhythmic in DD. The data support the hypothesis tha
t the eyes are the loci of circadian pacemakers in quail that act, via
both neural and hormonal outputs, to preserve the integrity of (self-
sustaining or damped) circadian oscillators located elsewhere.