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Daily light regulates seasonal responses in the migratory male redheaded bunting (Emberiza bruniceps)

โœ Scribed by Rani, Sangeeta ;Singh, Sudhi ;Misra, Manju ;Malik, Shalie ;Singh, Bhanu Pratap ;Kumar, Vinod


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
142 KB
Volume
303A
Category
Article
ISSN
1548-8969

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โœฆ Synopsis


This study analyzed the role of day length in regulation of seasonal body fattening and testicular growth in a latitudinal Palaearctic-Indian migrant, the redheaded bunting (Emberiza bruniceps). When exposed to increasing photoperiods (hours of light: hours of darkness; 11.5L:12.5D, 12L:12D, 12.5L:11.5D, 13L:11D, 14L:10D, and 18L:6D) for 9-12 weeks, buntings responded in a photoperiod-dependent manner and underwent growth and regression cycle under photoperiods of > or =12 hr per day. Also, the response to a long photoperiod of birds that were held under natural photoperiods at 27 degrees N for 2 years was similar to those who arrived the same year from their breeding grounds ( approximately 40 degrees N), suggesting that the experience of higher amplitude day-night (light-dark, LD) cycles during migratory and breeding seasons were not critical for the subsequent response (initiation-termination-reinitiation) cycle. Another experiment examined entrainment of the circadian photoperiodic rhythm in buntings by subjecting them to T=24+/-2 hr LD-cycles with 8 hr photophase and to T=22 and 24 hr with 11 hr photophase. The results showed a reduction in critical day length under T=22 hr LD-cycle. In the last experiment, we constructed an action spectrum for photoperiodic induction by exposing birds for 4.5 weeks to 13L:11D of white (control), blue (450 nm), or red (640 nm) light at irradiances ranging from 0.028 to 1.4 W m(-2). The threshold light irradiance for photoinduction was about 10-fold higher for blue light, than for red and white lights. These results conclude that the daily light of the environment regulates the endogenous program that times seasonal responses in body fattening and testicular cycles of the redheaded bunting.


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Role of melatonin in photoperiodic time
โœ Kumar, Vinod ;Singh, Sudhi ;Misra, Manju ;Malik, Shalie ;Rani, Sangeeta ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2002 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 158 KB

## Abstract In the present study, we asked the question whether physiological responses to day length of migratory redheaded bunting (__Emberiza bruniceps__) and nonmigratory Indian weaver bird (__Ploceus philippinus__) are mediated by the daily rhythm of melatonin. Melatonin was given either by in