Photoperiodic control of singing behavior and reproductive physiology in male Fife fancy canaries

Horm Behav. 2022 Jul:143:105194. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2022.105194. Epub 2022 May 10.

Abstract

Temperate-zone birds display marked seasonal changes in reproductive behaviors and the underlying hormonal and neural mechanisms. These changes were extensively studied in canaries (Serinus canaria) but differ between strains. Fife fancy male canaries change their reproductive physiology in response to variations in day length but it remains unclear whether they become photorefractory (PR) when exposed to long days and what the consequences are for gonadal activity, singing behavior and the associated neural plasticity. Photosensitive (PS) male birds that had become reproductively competent (high song output, large testes) after being maintained on short days (SD, 8 L:16D) for 6 months were divided into two groups: control birds remained on SD (SD-PS group) and experimental birds were switched to long days (16 L:8D) and progressively developed photorefractoriness (LD-PR group). During the following 12 weeks, singing behavior (quantitatively analyzed for 3 × 2 hours every week) and gonadal size (repeatedly measured by CT X-ray scans) remained similar in both groups but there was an increase in plasma testosterone and trill numbers in the LD-PR group. Day length was then decreased back to 8 L:16D for LD-PR birds, which immediately induced a cessation of song, a decrease in plasma testosterone concentration, in the volume of song control nuclei (HVC, RA and Area X), in HVC neurogenesis and in aromatase expression in the medial preoptic area. These data demonstrate that Fife fancy canaries readily respond to changes in photoperiod and display a pattern of photorefractoriness following exposure to long days that is associated with marked changes in brain and behavior.

Keywords: Neurogenesis; Singing behavior; Song analysis; Song control system; Songbirds; Testosterone.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Canaries* / physiology
  • Male
  • Photoperiod
  • Singing*
  • Testosterone
  • Vocalization, Animal / physiology

Substances

  • Testosterone