Abstract
Four groups of 10 male starlings were transferred from short daylengths (8 h light/day) to long daylengths (18 h light/day), which caused the tests to develop rapidly to maximum size and then to decrease to minimal size as birds became photorefractory. Birds were surgically thyroidectomized at 8, 16 or 28 weeks. A fourth group was left intact. Testicular volume and plasma FSH and prolactin concentrations were measured. After 42 weeks all birds were castrated and plasma FSH was measured during the next 6 weeks. Testicular growth began in all thyroidectomized birds between 4 and 8 weeks after thyroidectomy. By 42 weeks, the testes of all thyroidectomized birds were large, whereas those of intact birds were still of minimal size. Plasma FSH concentrations remained low in all birds and plasma prolactin values, originally elevated by long daylengths, decreased at a similar rate in thyroidectomized and intact birds. After castration at 42 weeks, plasma FSH values increased rapidly in all thyroidectomized birds but remained low in non-thyroidectomized birds. The results demonstrate that thyroidectomy of photorefractory starlings does not induce immediate testicular growth but may initiate a process which eventually terminates photorefractoriness in a way similar to that caused by return to short daylengths.
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