Abstract

A 27-month study of cycles of regression and recrudescence of testis function in adult, grey squirrels in a natural environment in southern England has shown concomitant variation in mean testes weights, mean plasma testosterone concentrations, and mean weights of accessory sex organs, this variation being closely associated with months of the year. Testis regression occurred in the period June to August, the exact timing differing among individuals. In 1979–1980 the testes of all squirrels then remained regressed for 7 months, whereas in the autumn of 1980 testes were regressed in most squirrels for 4 months. There was also evidence of testis regression in some individuals in March 1979 and March 1981. Males born and housed in a small woodland enclosure in 1979–1980 and well fed with grain did not experience the long period of regressed testes. Plasma testosterone concentrations measured hourly over 24 hr in squirrels with large, active testes varied from 0.4 to 20 nmol/ 1, both within and between individuals, the higher concentrations being observed between midday and midnight. The range in the age of males at puberty, based on fusion of the epiphyses of the wrist, was 1.0 to 1.25 year. Juvenile males housed in a woodland enclosure together with adult males and females remained prepubertal up to 2 years of age.

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