Springing into the season for reproduction
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Elisabeth Brown
There are rustlings and twitterings in the bushes, and I hear bird
song -- the males are tuning up. I even heard them singing in the
rain; on Laguna hillsides and canyons, the birds are thinking about
breeding.
Birds have to time their breeding to coincide with a time of
plentiful insects, so there will be plenty of food for hungry chicks.
That means they have to anticipate by many weeks when the insects
will be out. How do they know it’s time?
Also, because birds fly, they have to minimize every gram (1/28 of
an ounce) of extra weight. As every backpacker knows, everything
weighs something, and a lot of little items quickly add up to an
over-heavy pack. So it is with birds. When they’re finished breeding,
their reproductive system shuts down, and the ovaries and testes and
all the shell-making machinery shrivels up, saving a lot of weight.
But in the spring, something turns the reproductive system back
on. It’s not the warmer days; millions of birds breed on Arctic
tundra, making nests amid melting snow. Summer temperatures there
barely reach our winter temperatures, when our local birds are
definitely not breeding.
What else characterizes spring? The days are longer.
As it turns out, birds have a light meter in their brain -- a tiny
organ named the pineal gland -- that measures the day length and
regulates the reproductive cycle.
Buried deep in the brain, the pineal gland produces the hormone
melatonin -- but only in the dark. Melatonin, in turn, keeps the
reproductive system turned off. So, as the days get shorter, the
pineal gland produces more melatonin, and the reproductive organs go
into the deep freeze. In spring, as days get longer, less melatonin
is produced, and the bird’s reproductive system turns on again.
Other animals also have this light metering system. In lizards,
light reaches the pineal gland through a translucent section on the
top of the skull (sometimes called a “third eye”). In birds, a gland
around the eye registers the day length and passes the signal to the
pineal gland. We know it’s not the seeing part of the eye (the
retina) because even blind birds know what time of the year it is.
Humans measure light as well; some people become depressed in late
fall and winter, a condition known as seasonal affective disorder, or
SAD. Treatment includes sitting under banks of special lights (not
tanning booths!) for several hours a day.
Domestic chickens, bred for centuries to lay eggs year-round, are
still light-dependent. They gradually stop laying during the fall,
and restart in the spring. To keep them laying through the short days
of the year, chicken farmers use artificial light. In those
10,000-chicken sheds of the industrial egg farmers, the lights are on
all the time.
When I was an undergraduate at UC Berkeley, one of my professors
was an early researcher into the pineal gland, maybe because his own
day/night cycle was so unusual. If you happened to get to the biology
building very early, say, 5 a.m. or so, you would meet him coming
out, on his way home. He refused to teach an 8 a.m. class, saying, “I
don’t think I could stay up that late.”
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