Abstract

Prolactin (Prl) is released by electrical stimulation in the turkey hypothalamus and preoptic area (POA). Possible trajectories for POA efferents to the median eminence (ME) were tested by placing lesions in the POA, the lateral hypothalamus (LHy), or the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (VMN) of reproductively quiescent turkey hens, then subjecting them to long photoperiods while monitoring their blood Prl levels and nesting activities. In addition, lesions were made in the VMN of a group of incubating hens to learn whether the lesions would cause the elevated Prl levels to fall or interfere with incubation behavior. Lesions in medial POA, LHy, or VMN prevented the onset of incubation and prevented the large rise in Prl associated with it. However, these lesions did not interfere with the initial, more gradual Prl rise caused by increasing daylengths. Lesions in LHy or VMN appeared to interfere with a pathway lying laterally from POA to ME. Electrical stimulation in medial POA, which caused an increase in circulating Prl, failed to do so in hens with LHy or VMN lesions. Lesions in the VMN of incubating hens caused them to leave the nest and suffer a large decline in Prl, both within 48 h. It is tentatively suggested that incubation behavior and its associated elevated Prl are prevented by the POA lesions and that lesions in LHy or VMN, which mimic POA lesion effects, interfere with POA efferents projecting to ME.

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