Little is known about the effects of photoperiod on avian migrants that visit southeast Asia. In this paper, we report experiments performed on an emberizid finch, the Black‐headed Bunting Emberiza melanocephala, to investigate its photoperiodic responses under artificial photoperiods, and continuous light and darkness.Two series of experiments were performed with the photosensitive male birds. In the first series, different groups were exposed to seven different artificial photoperiods: 3L/21D, 6L/18D, 8L./16D, 11L/13D, 12L/12D, 15L/9D and 20L/4D, for 30 days. They were weighed and laparotomized at the beginning and end of the experiments. The birds responded to 12L/12D, 15L/9D and 20L/4D, but not to 3L/21D, 6L/18D, 8L/16D and 11L/13D. In the second series, photosensitive birds were placed under continuous light (LL) and dark (DD) conditions for 130 and 90 days. Periodic observations indicated that testicular growth and fattening followed by involution and fat‐depletion had resulted in birds under LL, indicating the onset of photorefractoriness, while DD had no effect either on gonads or fattening in the buntings.Our results demonstrate that light stimulation is a prerequisite to reproductive and metabolic activities (pre‐migratory and migratory changes, fattening and weight gain) in the Black‐headed Bunting, which has a photoperiodic threshold to these events at between 11 and 12 h daily photoperiods.