Abstract

Endogenous circannual rhythms of male golden-mantled ground squirrels (Spermophilus lateralis) exposed to low ambient temperature (6 °C) at various times were compared to the rhythms of a control group kept in a warm room (21 °C) throughout. A 20-week pulse of cold in the spring delayed the subsequent peak body weight and molt offset. However, in the second year after the spring cold pulse, a delay in the rhythm was evident only using peak weight as a phase marker. A 20-week cold pulse in the fall resulted in an earlier peak body weight and earlier onset of pigmented scrotum and descended testes, but there was no evidence from subsequent years that rhythms had been phase advanced. A third of the animals kept continuously at 6 °C remained with pigmented scrotum, descended testes and low body weight for more than a year. Circannual periodicities of animals that continued to display rhythms in the cold room were not significantly longer than those of controls in the warm room. The results suggest that low temperature in the fall can alter the expression of circannual rhythms without much affecting their phasing, while low temperature in the spring produces phase delays which last longer but have not been proved to be persistent.

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