The present study examines the ovulatory activity of wild and domesticated ewes subjected to either a constant photoperiod of long days (16L:8D) or natural changes in daily photoperiod for 16 mo. The aim was to determine whether an endogenous reproductive rhythm controls seasonal reproductive activity in these sheep, and how the photoperiod might affect this. The effects of long-day photoperiods on long-term changes in prolactin and melatonin secretion were also evaluated. The two species showed changes in reproductive activity under the constant photoperiod conditions, suggesting the existence of an endogenous rhythm of reproduction. This rhythm was differently expressed in the two types of ewe (P < 0.05), with the domestic animals exhibiting much greater sensitivity to the effects of long days. A circannual rhythm of plasma prolactin concentration was also seen in both species and under both photoperiod conditions, although in both species the amplitude was always lower in the long-day animals (P < 0.01). The duration of the nocturnal melatonin plasma concentrations reflected the duration of darkness in both species and treatments. The peak melatonin concentration did not differ between seasons either under natural or long-day photoperiods.
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1 March 2008
Endogenous Circannual Cycles of Ovarian Activity and Changes in Prolactin and Melatonin Secretion in Wild and Domestic Female Sheep Maintained under a Long-Day Photoperiod
Amelia Gómez-Brunet,
Julián Santiago-Moreno,
Anadel Campo,
Benoit Malpaux,
Philippe Chemineau,
Domingo J. Tortonese,
Antonio Gonzalez-Bulnes,
Antonio López-Sebastián
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Biology of Reproduction
Vol. 78 • No. 3
March 2008
Vol. 78 • No. 3
March 2008
Melatonin
ovarian cycles
ovulatory cycle
photoperiod
prolactin
seasonal reproduction
wild and domestic ewes