Abstract

The reproductive response of both intact adult and juvenile Turkish hamsters has been thoroughly studied and shown to be similar, unlike the golden hamster where juveniles remain aphotoperiodic until approximately 8 weeks of age. Unstudied to date, however, is the role of the pineal and its hormone melatonin in generating the testicular response to photoperiod in juvenile Turkish hamsters. Therefore, in this study we examined the reproductive response of prepubertal male Turkish hamsters, subjected to four different photoperiods (8L:16D, 16L:8D, 20L:4D, and 24L:0D) with altered pineal gland function. At 15 days of age, long-day-born (16L:8D) hamsters were either pinealectomized, received melatonin implants, or remained untreated. Testes sizes were measured every 2 weeks. Testicular growth occurred only in untreated and beeswax implanted groups in 16L:8D. Exposure to other photoperiods inhibited testicular development in untreated and beeswax implanted animals. Removal of the pineal gland, masking of the daily melatonin rhythm with constant release subcutaneous melatonin implants, or eliminating the daily rhythm of melatonin by continuous light exposure resulted in inhibition of gonadal development. These results demonstrate that juvenile Turkish hamsters respond similarly to adults on all photoperiods and under all conditions of pineal function tested.

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