Photoperiodic condition modulates the effects of testosterone on song control nuclei volumes in male European starlings.

D. Bernard,Gregory F Ball

Published 1997 in General and Comparative Endocrinology

ABSTRACT

Songbirds possess a specialized network of brain nuclei mediating song learning and production, the song system. In many species, the nuclei in this circuit are larger in volume in males housed on long photoperiods than in males housed on short photoperiods. Exposure to long days initially leads to increases in circulating levels of testosterone (T) and it is generally believed that volume changes in the song system are controlled by T-dependent effects of photoperiod. However, a growing body of evidence indicates that photoperiod can also have T-independent effects on song system morphology. Previous work in our laboratory suggested that photoperiodic condition may modulate the effects of exogenous testosterone on the volumes of song control nuclei in male European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris). In the present report, we tested the hypothesis that photorefractoriness attenuates the effects of T on the volumes of song control nuclei in starlings. One group of long-day photorefractory males (16L:8D) was exposed to exogenous T and two groups of short-day photosensitive birds (8L:16D) were either implanted with T or blank (control) capsules. After 8 weeks, T levels were elevated in both groups of T-implanted birds and were undetectable in control animals. Volumes of the high vocal center were larger in T-implanted photosensitive birds than in both T-implanted photorefractory and control photosensitive males, which did not differ. These results suggest that photorefractoriness renders the song nuclei of starlings less sensitive to stimulatory effects of T. Plasticity in the starling song system appears to require the coordination of the appropriate hormonal milieu with a permissive photoperiodic condition.

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