AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how different light durations (long vs short photoperiods) affect learning, spatial skills, and emotional responses in male Japanese quail.
  • Short photoperiods led to increased fearfulness and slower learning in spatial tasks, but better recall performance later on.
  • Additionally, the study revealed that short photoperiods are linked to lower neuron density in the hippocampus, suggesting that light conditions significantly affect behavior and brain development.

Article Abstract

The mechanisms underlying the photoperiodic control of reproduction in mammals and birds have been recently clarified. In contrast, the potential impact of photoperiod on more complex, integrative processes, such as cognitive behaviors, remains poorly characterized. Here, we investigated the impact of contrasted long and short photoperiods (LP, 16 h light/day and SP, 8 h light/day, respectively) on learning, spatial orientation abilities, and emotional reactivity in male Japanese quail. In addition, we quantified cell proliferation and young cell maturation/migration within the hippocampus, a brain region involved in spatial orientation. Our study reveals that, in male quail, SP increases emotional responses and spatial orientation abilities, compared to LP. Behaviorally, SP birds were found to be more fearful than LP birds, exhibiting more freezing in the open field and taking longer to exit the dark compartment in the emergence test. Furthermore, SP birds were significantly less aggressive than LP birds in a mirror test. Cognitively, SP birds were slower to habituate and learn a spatial orientation task compared to LP birds. However, during a recall test, SP birds performed better than LP birds. From a neuroanatomical standpoint, SP birds had a significantly lower density of young neurons, and also tended to have a lower density of mature neurons within the hippocampus, compared to LP birds. In conclusion, our data reveal that, beyond breeding control, photoperiod also exerts a profound influence on behavior, cognition, and brain plasticity, which comprise the seasonal program of this species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9849226PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-28248-1DOI Listing

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