Temperature cycles induce a bimodal activity pattern in ruin lizards: masking or clock-controlled event? A seasonal problem

J Biol Rhythms. 2001 Dec;16(6):574-84. doi: 10.1177/074873001129002268.

Abstract

The daily locomotor activity pattern of Ruin lizards in the field is mainly unimodal, except for summer months when soil temperatures exceed 40 degrees C to 42 degrees C around midday. In such a situation, lizards reduce their locomotor activity around midday to avoid overheating, and thus their daily activity pattern becomes bimodal. The bimodal pattern expressed in the field is usually retained in the free-running rhythm under constant temperature and DD for a couple of weeks, after which the bimodal pattern changes into a unimodal pattern. In the present study, the authors examined whether 24-h temperature cycles (TCs) would change lizard activity from a unimodal to a bimodal pattern. Administration of TCs to unimodal lizards free-running in DD is able to entrain locomotor rhythms and to induce a bimodal pattern both in summer and autumn-winter. There are, however, striking seasonal differences in the effectiveness with which TCs achieve bimodality: (a) Numbers of lizards rendered bimodal are significantly higher in summer than in autumn-winter; (b) TCs require less time to achieve bimodality in summer than autumn-winter; (c) bimodality is retained as an aftereffect in the postentrainment free-run in summer, but not in autumn-winter; (d) TCs change activity duration in summer, but not in autumn-winter. All this demonstrates the existence of seasonal changes in responsiveness of the circadian oscillators controlling activity to the external factors inducing bimodality. Oscillators' responsiveness is high in summer, when bimodality is the survival strategy of Ruin lizards to avoid overheating around midday in open fields, and low in autumn-winter, when bimodality has no recognizable adaptive significance.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Activity Cycles / physiology*
  • Animals
  • Circadian Rhythm
  • Lizards / physiology*
  • Male
  • Motor Activity / physiology
  • Seasons
  • Temperature*