Login / Signup

Daylight effect on melatonin secretion in adult female guanacos (Lama guanicoe).

José Luis Riveros FL M CorreaG Schuler
Published in: Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene (2017)
The wild South American camelids developed a strategy of seasonal reproduction during spring and summer with singleton birth. The photoperiod is one of the factors that may modulate this seasonality where light would be translated into a hormonal signal. This study evaluated the influence of changes in daily light intensity on melatonin concentration in captive guanacos under a long-day photoperiod (16 hr light/8 hr dark; 33 '28'S). Mean melatonin concentration was 28.3 ± 20.3 pg/ml, with a maximum of 52.14 ± 17.19 pg/ml at 23:30 and minimum of 14.29 ± 6.64 pg/ml at 08:30 (p < .001). There was a negative association between light intensity and melatonin concentration (r = -0.57; p < .001). The results indicate that guanacos respond to variation in daily environmental light with a hormonal response and point to a circannual rhythm as a function of the photoperiod.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • high intensity
  • preterm birth
  • metabolic syndrome
  • skeletal muscle
  • blood pressure
  • young adults
  • adipose tissue
  • climate change
  • heat stress
  • weight gain
  • birth weight
  • insulin resistance
  • childhood cancer