Changes in concentrations of hypothalamic gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and pituitary and plasma FSH and prolactin were measured in intact and thyroidectomized female starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) after transfer from short to long photoperiods. In intact birds, hypothalamic GnRH did not increase significantly during the first 6 weeks of photo-stimulation, but by 12 weeks, as birds became photorefractory, it had decreased to levels significantly lower than those before photostimulation. In thyroidectomized birds, which did not become photorefractory, hypothalamic GnRH remained high after 12 weeks of photostimulation. Pituitary FSH increased in both intact and thyroidectomized birds; it then decreased to low levels in intact photorefractory birds, but remained high in thyroidectomized birds. Plasma FSH increased to a peak after 2 weeks, but by 6 weeks it had decreased to low levels in both groups. In intact birds there was a 70-fold increase in pituitary prolactin during the first 6 weeks, and levels were still high after 12 weeks of photostimulation. In thyroidectomized birds, pituitary prolactin remained low. The results suggest that while the initial effect of long daylengths is to cause gonadal maturation, the ultimate effect is to switch off the reproductive system.
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