Abstract

The circadian locomotor activity rhythms of 7 species of lizards can readily be entrained (synchronized) toLD12: 12 (30–50 lux: 0) fluorescent light cycles after complete surgical removal of both eyes. Removal of the parietal eye and pineal organ does not prevent entrainment of blinded lizards. Appropriate control experiments established that lightper se, and not low amplitude temperature cycles or other obvious environmental variables, was the entraining stimulus for blinded lizards. In some cases, blocking the penetration of light to the brains of blinded lizards caused them to free-run (express their endogenous circadian rhythm) in the presence of a dim green light cycle, to which they had previously entrained, suggesting that the brain is the site of the extraretinal photoreceptor(s) mediating entrainment. The extraretinal photoreceptor(s) is capable of intensity discrimination since changing the intensity of aLD 12: 12 fluorescent light cycle caused a change in the phase-relationship between the entrained activity rhythm and the light cycle in a blinded gekko. The lateral eyes are also involved in mediating entrainment since removal of the lateral eyes of thoseSceloporus olivaceus which previously entrained to a dim green light cycle [LD 12: 12 (0.05 lux: 0)] caused them to free-run. Also, blinding had noticeable effects on the entrained activity patterns of some species of lizards.

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