Song learning in white-crowned sparrows, Zonotrichia leucophrys, involves three steps: memorization of external models, song practice and selection of a song from the practiced repertoire for crystallization. These three events occur in a sequential and predictable order during the first year of life in captive sparrows. To study the external regulation of these events, we raised nestling sparrows under conditions in which photoperiod and tutor exposure were manipulated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn behavior reminiscent of the responsiveness of human infants to speech, young songbirds innately recognize and prefer to learn the songs of their own species. The acoustic and physiological bases for innate recognition were investigated in fledgling white-crowned sparrows lacking song experience. A behavioral test revealed that the complete conspecific song was not essential for innate recognition: songs composed of single white-crowned sparrow phrases and songs played in reverse elicited vocal responses as strongly as did normal song.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBird song is a complex, learned behavior. Vocal learning in sparrows involves several different processes that occur in a distinct temporal pattern over the course of the first year of life. Songs are acquired without practice during a sensitive period within the first 3 months of life and rehearsal of the acquired song does not begin until 7 or 8 months of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSiberian hamsters undergo gonadal development for several weeks after exposure to a single longer day at weaning. To characterize changes in gonadotropin secretion after a single acute light stimulus, hamsters housed in a long photoperiod (16L:8D) were given a single longer day (20L:4D) or maintained in the 16L:8D photoperiod at 19 days of age and transferred to a short photoperiod (8L:16D) on Day 20. Elevated plasma FSH concentrations were detected in male hamsters at 5, 7, and 12 but not at 17 days after the single longer day.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Dev Brain Res
August 1990
Rates of brain growth differed in meadow voles maintained in long (LP) or short (SP) photoperiods postnatally. At 35 days of age, brain weight was greater by 6.6% in LP males and by 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Dev Brain Res
May 1990
In most adult mammals, brain weights of males exceed those of females. The role of androgens in the genesis of this sex difference was assessed in meadow voles by acute neonatal or chronic postweaning manipulation of testosterone titers. Female voles given a single injection of testosterone propionate (TP) on the second day of postnatal life had brain weights in adulthood that were indistinguishable from those of male voles and significantly heavier than those of control females.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMale meadow voles kept in a long photoperiod (LP) from birth to 70 days of age have heavier brains than those kept in a short photoperiod (SP). Brain weights of male voles kept in the LP first exceeded those of SP animals at 20 days of age; differences were greatest at 35 days (5.8%) and persisted through 140 days of age (2%), although the magnitude of the difference declined progressively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMale and female Djungarian hamsters maintained from birth in a short photoperiod (8 h light per day; 8L:16D) showed substantial testicular and uterine growth in response to a single long photoperiod or a 15-min light pulse that interrupted the 16-h dark period at 18 days of age. These light regimens resulted in heavier testes and uteri at 30 and 35 days of age when compared with those of control animals. Similar results were obtained in hamsters maintained from birth to Day 18 in a long photoperiod (16L:8D), given a single longer day (20L:4D) or constant light on Day 18 and then transferred to a short photoperiod (8L:16D) on Day 19.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHorm Behav
December 1987
The influence of gonadal hormones on body mass of adult male meadow voles varied systematically as a function of the animals' baseline body weight; heavier voles decreased and lighter voles increased their body mass after castration. Testosterone replacement reversed the effects of castration; changes in body mass during hormone treatment were negatively correlated with changes observed after castration. Body mass of intact males was not correlated with plasma testosterone titers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring a one year period, seven rejected cotton-top tamarin infants were hand-reared. A hand-rearing program was developed which included the use of heated surrogates, a non-human primate infant formula, special nipples, and a systematic reintroduction into a family group. This regimen was quite successful.
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