Abstract

We examined neural and gonadal responses to photoperiod in a late-summer-breeding finch, the American goldfinch (Carduelis tristis). First we measured seasonal changes in the gonads of free-living goldfinches. Next we determined whether the gonads of goldfinches held on constant long days would eventually regress spontaneously. Finally, we compared the hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) system and song-control system of breeding and postbreeding birds. The results confirm that the gonads of wild goldfinches regress in late summer and show that the gonads of goldfinches held on constant long days regress spontaneously. Thus, according to at least one criterion, goldfinches become photorefractory, like other seasonally breeding songbirds. As well, goldfinches exhibited similar seasonal changes in the brain to spring-breeding birds. There was a decrease in GnRH immunoreactivity in autumn and a strong trend towards a reduction in the size of song-control regions (although this was statistically significant for only one area). Thus, although goldfinches breed late in summer as day length declines, some of their physiological responses to changes in photoperiod are similar to those that occur in spring-breeding songbirds.

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