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First published online April 17, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 1259-1269 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.025411
Circannual basis of geographically distinct bird schedules
Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, 82346 Andechs, Germany
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: helm{at}orn.mpg.de)
Accepted 9 February 2009
| Summary |
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Key words: circannual, photoperiod, seasonality, reproduction, migration, bird
| INTRODUCTION |
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Avian itineraries differ between species in a given habitat and often also
within species, depending on geographical location. With increasing latitude,
birds generally have shorter reproductive periods, breed later and moult
faster than at lower latitudes. Schedules also differ between habitats at
given latitudes, e.g. associated with altitude, urbanisation and climatic
gradients (Baker, 1938
;
Lack, 1950
;
Curry-Lindhal, 1963
;
Klein, 1974
;
Murton and Westwood, 1977
;
Widmer, 1998
;
Partecke et al., 2004
;
Perfito et al., 2004
;
Moore et al., 2005
;
Partecke et al., 2005
;
Newton, 2008
). Hence, closely
related taxa and populations may show distinct timing.
The basis of these distinct schedules is still largely unclear. In general,
timing involves an inherited background mechanism that provides a temporal
framework. It buffers organisms from misleading information, e.g. warm spells
in winter, while integrating reliable, predictive, temporal
cues–predominantly photoperiod (i.e. the light fraction of the day)
(Murton and Westwood, 1977
;
Gwinner, 1986
;
Prendergast et al., 2002
;
Bradshaw and Holzapfel, 2007
).
Within this framework, schedules may be further modified by environmental
conditions, for instance, temperature or food availability
(Wingfield, 1980
;
Hahn et al., 1992
;
Hahn et al., 1997
;
Dawson, 2008
). The resulting
compromise between rigid pre-programmed timing and environmental flexibility
should accommodate the requirements of a given species in its given
habitat.
Geographical differences could therefore arise from phenotypic plasticity
in response to local conditions (Perfito
et al., 2004
; Dawson,
2008
; Hahn and
MacDougall-Shackleton, 2008
). Yet direct environmental control is
an insufficient explanation for the scheduling of most seasonal species
studied so far. Timing in captivity approximated timing in the wild
(Davies et al., 1969
;
König and Gwinner, 1995
;
Lambrechts et al., 1997
;
Lambrechts et al., 1999
;
Partecke et al., 2004
) [but
see Perfito et al. (Perfito et al.,
2004
; Perfito et al.,
2008
)], indicating the presence of internal timing programs. These
programs involve photoperiod as an accurate external calendar but because
seasonal implications of a given daylength depend on locality, timing
responses must be tuned to a population's particular situation. Responses to
daylength depend on the phase of the annual cycle. Activities are typically
accelerated by long days in spring and by short days in autumn
(Hahn et al., 1997
;
Gwinner and Helm, 2003
;
Sharp, 2005
). Birds are able
to respond to minute long photoperiodic signals, for instance, enhanced
reproductive growth following a 17-minute increase in daylength
(Hau et al., 1998
). Yet
despite marked daylength effects on timing, many birds and other organisms do
not require photoperiodic change to drive their annual cycles, as rhythmicity
persists under constant conditions. Marked individual variation, period
lengths close to but deviating from 12 months and consequently drift of
seasonal timing from the external year reveal the existence of underlying,
circannual rhythms (Gwinner,
1986
; Holberton and Able,
1992
; Gwinner,
1996
; Prendergast et al.,
2002
; Goldman et al.,
2004
; Helm, 2006
;
Lincoln et al., 2006
;
Piersma et al., 2008
).
Daylength nonetheless plays an important role as a synchronising cue
(zeitgeber) for circannual rhythms, entraining the otherwise free-running
cycles of individuals to the external photoperiodic calendar. Under natural
conditions, cycles are therefore precise and the period is 12 months.
Accordingly, geographical differences in schedules could also be based on
modified photoperiodic responses, on different circannual organisation or on
interactions between them. Distinct photoperiodic responses, usually
interpreted as thresholds, have been described in several species without
explicitly addressing circannual programming
(Curry-Lindhal, 1963
;
Murton and Westwood, 1977
;
Silverin et al., 1993
;
Lambrechts et al., 1997
;
Noskov et al., 1999
;
Helm et al., 2005
;
Sharp, 2005
;
Hahn and MacDougall-Shackleton,
2008
; Silverin et al.,
2008
). Likewise, related taxa have differed in circannual rhythms
but implications for timing under natural photoperiods remained largely
unclear (Gwinner, 1996
;
Dawson, 2007
;
Wikelski et al., 2008
). The
lack of integration of photoperiodic and circannual approaches is regrettable
because together both aspects of seasonal timing represent a functional entity
(Gwinner, 1996
;
Bradshaw and Holzapfel, 2007
;
Paul et al., 2008
). Their
joint contributions to timing in the `real world'
(Menaker, 2006
) can be
identified by simultaneous study of circannual rhythms and photoperiodism in
species with distinct schedules.
We investigated seasonal timing in the stonechat (Saxicola
torquata Linnaeus), a songbird whose vast breeding range from Siberia to
southern Africa (Underhill,
1999
; Urquhart,
2002
) covers diverse climatic and photoperiodic conditions. We
have previously shown that stonechats of European, Siberian and African origin
differed conspicuously in the timing of postjuvenile moult and migratory
restlessness and in the way these behaviours were affected by photoperiod
(Helm and Gwinner, 1999
;
Helm et al., 2005
;
Helm and Gwinner, 2006
).
Stonechat seasonal activities are partly under circannual control, and
crossbreeding revealed genetic differences in postjuvenile moult
(Gwinner and Dittami, 1990
;
Gwinner, 1996
;
Helm, 2006
). The present study
examines reproductive and moult cycles in European and Siberian stonechats.
The closely related taxa (Cramp and
Simmons, 1988
; Illera et al.,
2008
) breed at similar latitudes but differ in seasonal behaviour
and migratory habit (Raess and Gwinner,
2005
; Helm et al.,
2006a
; Flinks et al.,
2008
; Raess,
2008
). Central European stonechats (S. t. rubicola) are
short-distance migrants. They spend over six months, from March until October,
on the breeding grounds where they raise several clutches and undergo
postnuptial moult. Siberian stonechats from Kazakhstan (S. t. maura),
by contrast, are long-distance migrants visiting their breeding grounds only
from May until August. Under a more continental climate, they raise a single
brood followed by rapid moult. Due to these itineraries, the birds experience
different daylengths outside, but not during, the breeding period
(Fig. 1). Days are longer for
Siberian than for European stonechats on the winter quarters but from the
spring equinox onwards (ca. 21 March), days are shorter for Siberian
stonechats until both taxa have reached the breeding grounds.
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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For the simulation of photoperiodic conditions, the time interval between the onset of civil twilight in the morning and the end of civil twilight in the evening was used, assuming that the daylength effective for photoperiodic reactions corresponds closely to this interval. Light during daytime was provided by fluorescent tubes at an intensity of about 300lx at the level of the perches. At night, incandescent light bulbs produced an intensity of about 0.01lx at perch level.
Birds were exposed to simulated local daylength (47.5 deg.N) during the
breeding season. In autumn, with the onset of natural migration, we split
broods and exposed birds to the photoperiods experienced during wintering and
migration by either taxon (Fig.
1). Siberian stonechats winter in south-central Asia, at latitudes
of ca. 15–30 deg.N (Raess
and Gwinner, 2005
). Thus, the photoperiodic simulation was
adjusted at weekly intervals assuming that they reach 45 deg. on 8 Sept., 42.5
deg. on 15 Sept., 40.0 deg. on 22 Sept., 37.5 deg. on 29 Sept., 35 deg. on 6
Oct., 32.5 deg. on 13 Oct., 30 deg. on 20 Oct., 27.5 deg. on 27 Oct. and 25
deg. on 3 Nov. Correspondingly, daylength during spring migration was
simulated, assuming that birds move north to 27.5 deg. on 10 March, 30 deg. on
17 March, 32.5 deg. on 24 March, 35 deg. on 31 March, 37.5 deg. on 7 April, 40
deg. on 14 April, 42.5 deg. on 21 April, 45 deg. on 28 April and 47.5 deg. on
5 May. Most Central European stonechats winter in the Mediterranean area at
latitudes from ca. 32.5–42.5 deg.N
(Helm et al., 2006a
). Thus,
daylength was adjusted assuming that they reach 45 deg. on 4 Oct., 42.5 deg.
on 11 Oct. and 40 deg. on 18 Oct. In spring, birds were assumed to reach 42.5
deg. on 28 Feb., 45 deg. on 7 March and 47.5 deg. on 14 March. Persistence of
schedules was tested in some birds kept under these conditions for two years.
For all others, the experiment ended after a year with the completion of
moult. To examine underlying circannual rhythms, an additional group of six
Siberian males was exposed to constant daylength (12.25 h:11.75 h L:D) for two
years from either before hatching or within the first three weeks of life. For
comparison, we used data on European stonechats from a previously published
study (Gwinner, 1991
). We
extracted testes size of the 11 males with complete two-year records from the
original protocols. As birds differed in hatching dates (European stonechats:
27 April to 13 July; Siberian stonechats: early June) and received no external
time cues subsequently, we plotted all circannual data with reference to age,
rounding days of life to months.
Reproductive cycles were determined in two ways. For a direct measure of
reproductive organs, birds were laparotomised every 3–6 weeks
(Gwinner, 1975
). Measurements
began before birds came into breeding condition and were discontinued after
gonadal regression. During the remaining time, only the birds under constant
conditions were laparotomised in monthly or bimonthly intervals. We collected
far more information on male stonechats than female stonechats. This is
because in captivity, full follicular maturation occurs only in few females
and reproductive cycles are accordingly variable. We nonetheless included
females to explore whether patterns were generally similar to those observed
in males. Testicular width or the diameter of the largest follicle were
determined to the nearest 0.1 mm. For a subset of 43 males
(Table 1), plasma levels of
testosterone were also determined. Blood samples were taken in parallel to
gonadal measurements by puncturing the alar vein using a 23-gauge needle.
Blood (150–200 µl) was collected into heparinised microcapillaries,
immediately centrifuged for 10 min and the plasma was stored
at–70°C. Moult was checked at weekly intervals under simulated
natural daylengths only. Moult onset and completion refer to the replacement
of the nine fully developed primaries and thus to the, presumably, most
vulnerable core part of plumage change. Onset was defined as the mean date
between the last recording with intact primaries and the first recording with
moult, and completion was defined as the date between the last recording with
moult and the first recording without moult.
Testosterone concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay after partial
purification on diatomaceous earth/glycol columns following Goymann et al.
(Goymann et al., 2006
). A
total of 480 samples were analysed in seven assays. The lower detection limit
of the standard curves was determined as the first value outside the 95%
confidence intervals for the zero standard (Bmax) and was on average 0.7 pg
tube–1 (range 0.6–0.8 pg tube–1).
Non-detectable values were assumed to be equivalent to the lower detection
limits; thus, giving a conservative estimate of hormone levels. The
intra-assay variation was 6.1% on average (range: 2.7–12.5%) and the
inter-assay variation was 9.1%. Individual recoveries after column separation
were calculated as percentage activity eluted from the columns of total
activity added prior to extraction and column chromatography. Mean
(±s.d.) recovery for testosterone was 70±5%. Hormone
concentrations were log-transformed to match a normal distribution and
back-transformed for graphical presentation.
Testosterone levels and size of testes and follicles were analysed by
repeated-measure, linear mixed-models, accounting for a first-order
autoregressive structure of the data. For moult, we used linear mixed-models
over both sexes (Genstat, VSN International, Hemel Hempstead, UK). The main
models accounted for effects of age, taxon, sex, photoperiod, time of year and
all interactions. In one case, model assumptions were not completely met and
analyses were repeated over ranked data for conservative reassessment. Figures
show median ±s.e.median (Sokal and
Rohlf, 1995
).
All experimental procedures conformed to the relevant regulatory standards under permit by the state of Upper Bavaria.
| RESULTS |
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In females (Fig. 2), follicular cycles showed similar differences between the taxa (Wald6=19.1; P=0.004), with an earlier onset and longer maintenance of breeding condition in European stonechats. European females had larger follicles from January until early May (all P<0.05) and, thereafter, follicular sizes were similar. Follicles were larger in second year than first year birds (Wald1=14.2; P<0.001). These differences depended on time of year (Wald5=35.5; P<0.001), as follicles of older females were larger in early and late May only.
Data on moult (Fig. 2) were analysed jointly for the sexes. As in free-living birds, Siberian stonechats initiated moult earlier (Wald1=21.9; P<0.001), moulted more rapidly (Wald1=244.0; P<0.001) and completed moult much before European stonechats (Wald1=275.6; P<0.001). Females started moult after males (Wald1=30.9; P<0.001) but moulted slightly faster (Wald1=5.9; P=0.015) and thus finished at similar times (Wald1=2.7; P=0.104). Moult was also somewhat influenced by age. Among birds observed over two years, moult started earlier (Wald1=4.12; P=0.042) and tended to proceed more rapidly (Wald1=3.0; P=0.082) and end earlier (Wald1=3.7; P=0.054) in the second year in both sexes.
Hybrid stonechats and parental taxa in a common-garden setup
To assess genetic determination, we kept F1 hybrids and the parental taxa
for one year under common Siberian-type daylength
(Fig. 3). Hybrids originating
from European and Siberian mothers did not differ in gonadal and moult cycles
(Fig. 3) (inlays; gonadal
cycles males: Wald5=3.9; P=0.56; gonadal cycles females:
Wald5=7.3; P=0.199; moult: all P>0.46) and
were thus pooled. Hybrid males differed in testicular cycles from those of
Siberian (Fig. 3;
Wald5=52.2; P<0.001) as well as European stonechats
(Wald5=55.6; P<0.001). The differences were not
constant over time. Hybrid testes were smaller than those of European males
from January until early April and again in late May and June
(P
0.002) but larger than those of Siberian males in February and
early April (P<0.001). Therefore, hybrid testicular cycles were
intermediate between the parental taxa during the gonadal growth phase but,
during gonadal regression, resembled those of Siberian males. Testosterone
concentrations (Fig. 3)
increased first in European males, forming a drawn-out shallow peak from late
February to early April. Plasma levels peaked in hybrids in early April and in
Siberian males in early May. The peak in Siberian males was short and sharp.
Testosterone cycles of hybrids and both parental taxa differed significantly
(Wald10=26.8; P=0.003) but post-hoc comparisons
were obscured by small sample sizes and striking differences in amplitude.
Testosterone cycles differed between hybrid, European (Wald5=12.7;
P<0.026) and tentatively Siberian males (Wald5=10.7;
P=0.058). Follicular cycles were measured in hybrid and Siberian
females only (Fig. 3) and, as
in males, differed significantly (Wald=12.3; d.f.=5; P=0.031).
Follicles developed earlier in hybrids (April: P=0.002) but were
similar during the remaining period.
|
Moult onset (Fig. 3) (Wald2=15.7; P<0.001), duration (Wald2=163.5; P<0.001) and completion (Wald2=353.8; P<0.001) differed significantly between hybrids and the parental taxa. Moult completion and duration in hybrids were intermediate and significantly distinct from both parental taxa (all P<0.001). Its onset, by contrast, was not intermediate but occurred at the same time as in Siberian stonechats (Wald1=0.1; P=0.801) but much earlier than in European stonechats (Wald1=7.1; P=0.003). This unexpected finding was consistent in both sexes. Overall, females began moult after males (Wald1=18.8; P<0.001) but moulted more rapidly (Wald1=9.3; P=0.002) and therefore finished simultaneously (Wald1=0.86; P=0.355).
Circannual cycles
Testicular cycles of Siberian males kept for two years under constant
conditions are shown in Fig. 4
next to replotted data of European males from a previously published study
(Gwinner, 1991
). Reproductive
cycles of the two taxa were clearly distinct (Wald14=45.5;
P<0.001). As under synchronising conditions (Figs
2 and
3), gonadal growth occurred
earlier in European than Siberian males
(Fig. 4). However, median
testicular growth of Siberian stonechats was delayed in the first year and
partly overlapped with regression in European stonechats. This and the
relatively long duration of the first testicular cycle were due to partial
gonadal activation prior to full testicular development in several Siberian
males but only exceptional European males
(Fig. 4). Based on the
differences in spontaneous testicular growth, we predicted concomitant
differences in photoperiodic response. Since European stonechats entered
reproductive condition earlier in the year, we expected them also to respond
to photostimulation by long days earlier than Siberian stonechats. Hence, we
predicted that the slightly longer days in winter experienced under
Siberian-type long-distance migration should stimulate gonadal development of
European but not Siberian stonechats.
|
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In females (Fig. 5), follicular cycles also depended on taxon (Wald5=16.0; P=0.007). As no data were available for European stonechats under Siberian-type photoperiod, daylength effects were examined in Siberian females only and were not significant (Wald5=5.3; P=0.381). Follicles of the taxa differed under identical (European-type) conditions (Wald1=16.9; P<0.001) and were larger in European than Siberian females from February until late May (all P<0.01).
Data on moult timing (Fig. 5) corroborated the patterns observed above. The taxa differed in moult onset (Wald1=46.0; P<0.001), completion (Wald1=345.4; P<0.001) and duration (Wald1=254.9; P<0.001), with earlier and more rapid moult in Siberian than European stonechats. Photoperiod also affected flight feather change. Moult started (Wald1=39.2; P<0.001) and ended (Wald1=18.6; P<0.001) earlier under simulated European-type short-distance migration but took similarly long (Wald1=0.4; P=0.527). The advancement of moult onset under European photoperiod was slightly larger in Siberian than European stonechats (Wald1=4.6; P=0.033). Moult under European conditions progressed more slowly in Siberian stonechats but more quickly in European stonechats (interaction taxon and photoperiod: Wald1=5.2; P=0.023). Sex influenced moult onset (Wald1=12.9; P<0.001) and duration (Wald1=6.2; P=0.012) but not completion. Overall, females commenced moult slightly later than males but moulted faster, especially Siberian females under native conditions (Fig. 5).
| DISCUSSION |
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These findings can be readily integrated with the current understanding of
avian timing. The response to any given daylength depends on the precise phase
of the annual or circannual cycle. Exposure to lengthening photoperiod prior
to breeding can advance reproductive activation but most species do not retain
breeding condition indefinitely in long photoperiods. The phenomenon whereby
reproductive condition is terminated on long days and usually at first is not
even restimulated by constant light (Hahn
et al., 1997
; Hahn and
MacDougall-Shackleton, 2008
), has been termed
`photo-refractoriness', but might equally be considered to be the expression
of an underlying circannual oscillator. Photoperiod continues to be read by
birds and other organisms, as evident from clock gene expression patterns and
simultaneous action of photoperiod on moult, for example
(Jenni and Winkler, 1994
;
Noskov et al., 1999
;
Lincoln et al., 2005
).
Shortening days during this phase accelerate post-breeding processes. Some
species can regain reproductive competence under long days [16 or more hours
of light (Hamner and Stocking,
1970
; Berthold et al.,
1972
; Wingfield,
1993
)] but others require a period of short days to allow a
subsequent response to long days to occur. The requirement for short days can
be termed `the breaking of refractoriness' but equally might be considered to
be an advance of the underlying circannual system, which in some species is
obligatory (Gwinner, 1986
;
Sharp, 2005
;
Dawson, 2007
). After moult,
short days may still accelerate the dissipation of reproductive inhibition
whereas long days become increasingly efficient at reactivating the
reproductive system (Murton and Westwood,
1977
; Farner,
1985
; Gwinner,
1988
; Gwinner,
1996
; Hahn et al.,
1997
).
The transition between accelerating and delaying effects of a given
daylength is crucial for the timing of the annual cycle. For instance, short
days in winter have been associated with advanced breeding schedules in some
species. When starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) were kept under different
natural photoperiods, those exposed to the shortest winter days (ca.
6 h at 67.5 deg.N) were the first to reinitiate reproductive processes in
December (Gwinner, 1986
).
Without exposure to short daylength, starlings remain arrested in the inactive
phase of their circannual cycle and do not re-initiate gonadal growth
(Gwinner, 1986
;
Dawson, 2007
). Conversely, in
long-distance migrants, reproductive inhibition is dissipated gradually and
spontaneously under constant photoperiods
(Engels, 1969
;
Gwinner, 1988
;
Gwinner et al., 1988
). Garden
warblers (Sylvia borin) were kept in 12.8 h days and transferred to
15 h days between November and April. The gonadal response to photostimulation
increased gradually and was fully developed in early April. At this time, some
birds were just starting spontaneous, circannual reproductive activation.
Accordingly, evolutionary modification of reproductive inhibition and of the
photoperiodic conditions leading to its termination have been repeatedly
invoked as a way in which annual cycles can be adjusted to particular
environments (Lofts and Murton,
1968
; Hamner and Stocking,
1970
; Murton and Westwood,
1977
; Gwinner,
1988
; Gwinner,
1989
; Gwinner,
1996
; Hahn et al.,
1997
; Sharp,
2005
). The evolutionary flexibility of such modifications was
recently documented in an enlightening review that differentiated between
characteristics of `photo-refractoriness' and found them to vary independently
in an extensive dataset on finches and other passerines
(Hahn and MacDougall-Shackleton,
2008
).
In the stonechats, geographical differences in reproductive timing were
hard-wired in distinct circannual programs
(Fig. 4). European stonechats
started spontaneous, circannual testis growth between November and February,
at ages of ca. 6 months (Gwinner,
1991
). Correspondingly, under natural daylengths, testes developed
in early winter (Figs 2 and
5), and responsiveness of the
reproductive system to constant light was restored in November
(Gwinner and Scheuerlein,
1999
). By contrast, in Siberian stonechats, spontaneous,
circannual gonadal growth was first recorded in early April (at ages of
ca. 9–10 months; Fig.
4). The timing coincided with reproductive growth under natural
photoperiods (Figs 2 and
5) and occurred at similar
times as in other long-distance migrants for which delayed
photo-responsiveness has been reported
(Engels, 1969
;
Hamner and Stocking, 1970
;
Gwinner, 1988
;
Gwinner, 1989
). In the
stonechats, the circannual differences in reproductive activation determined
whether a given, naturally experienced photoperiod had advancing or delaying
effects. In European stonechats, testis growth was slightly advanced under
longer-day Siberian-type conditions as early as in January
(Fig. 5). Siberian stonechats,
by contrast, experienced these winter daylengths during a phase when short,
and not long, photoperiods accelerated the annual cycle. Testicular growth was
advanced under shorter-day European-type conditions by early April, and
testosterone peaked in late March. After the spring equinox
(Fig. 1), the progressively
longer days may have further accelerated schedules.
Stonechats also modified the termination of breeding in response to
photoperiod. Both taxa delayed gonadal regression and moult after simulated
Siberian-type long-distance migration (Fig.
5). We have shown in an earlier study that even after identical
winter conditions, a slower increase in spring daylength alone (Fig. S1 in
supplementary material) delayed post-breeding itineraries of European
stonechats (Helm and Gwinner,
2005
). After complete gonadal growth, one group of males was
continued under native conditions and a second group exposed to the more
slowly lengthening spring days of Siberian-type long-distance migration (Fig.
S1 in supplementary material). The Siberian-type group delayed all subsequent
processes until autumn migration, indicating a shift of the annual cycle and
no further synchronisation until autumn (Fig. S1 in supplementary material).
Likewise in the present study, European birds under Siberian long-distance
conditions delayed summer and autumn processes but since they had already
advanced gonadal growth, their breeding cycle was lengthened
(Fig. 5). This finding suggests
that a separate photoperiodic response at the time of spring arrival adjusts
the termination of the breeding season, possibly securing sufficient time for
breeding. Sharp and Blache (Sharp and
Blache, 2003
) have observed that two hormones, LH (luteinizing
hormone) and prolactin, respectively, may differ in their responses to
photostimulation and thereby be implicated in defining the opening and closing
of the reproductive window (Sharp,
2005
). Accordingly, geographical differences in the timing and
length of the breeding season, as observed in the stonechats, could be linked
to differential photoresponsiveness of LH and prolactin secretion,
respectively, and this possibility merits further testing. Siberian stonechats
also delayed post-breeding activities under native conditions. Yet due to the
timing of their breeding window, we cannot distinguish whether this delay was
due to longer winter or shorter spring daylength. Testosterone patterns under
the different photoperiods were inconclusive, mostly because of striking
attenuation of peak concentrations in both taxa under non-native conditions
(Fig. 5).
Non-photoperiodic factors contributed to seasonal timing. Captive
stonechats retained distinct schedules but started and ended reproductive
cycles earlier than in the field. Advanced breeding in captivity occurs in
many, but not all, species and may be related to temperature, food
availability and illumination (e.g. Davies
et al., 1969
; Partecke et al.,
2004
; Perfito et al.,
2004
; Silverin et al.,
2008
). Stonechat moult began earlier in captivity but took longer
and thus ended at the same time as in the field
(Raess, 2005
;
Raess and Gwinner, 2005
;
Flinks et al., 2008
). Age had
considerable effects on testicular growth
(Fig. 2). Testicular cycles
started earlier in the second year, a pattern reported in many but not all
wild and captive birds (Deviche et al.,
2000
; Dawson,
2003
; Partecke et al.,
2004
). In the wild, additional factors influence reproductive
timing, for instance social interactions, temperature, food availability and
vegetational change (Wingfield,
1980
; Hahn et al.,
1997
; Perfito et al.,
2004
; O'Brien and Hau,
2005
; Helm et al.,
2006b
; Voigt et al.,
2007
; Bauchinger et al.,
2008
; Dawson,
2008
; Perfito et al.,
2008
; Verhulst and Nilsson,
2008
). That the impact of environmental factors on schedules
differs between closely related taxa
(Ramenofsky and Wingfield,
2006
) may in some cases also relate to circannual organisation.
Circannual rhythms provide temporal windows for activities like reproduction
and migration (Gwinner, 1996
;
Gwinner, 1999
). Under
relatively rigid circannual regulation, activities are modified within these
windows only whereas under more flexible control, the windows themselves may
be modified. This is again illustrated by comparative studies of stonechats.
Free-living Siberian and African (S. t. axillaris) stonechats both
breed once per year (Dittami and Gwinner,
1985
; Raess and Gwinner,
2005
) but reproductive windows, as defined by active gonads, are
much wider in African (Gwinner,
1991
; Gwinner,
1996
) than Siberian (Figs
2,
3,
4,
5) birds. In aviaries, both
taxa used their entire respective time window for breeding. Hence, African but
not Siberian stonechats boosted reproduction
(König and Gwinner, 1995
;
Helm et al., 2005
). Wide
breeding windows provide flexibility to take advantage of conducive conditions
while ensuring that other processes, e.g. moult, still occur at the right
time. Field data from Canary Island stonechats (S. dacotiae) indicate
similar seasonal organisation at mid-latitudes
(Illera and Diaz, 2006
).
European stonechats, in turn, frequently extended the duration of the breeding
window by adding late clutches and consequently delaying moult
(Flinks et al., 2008
). Thus,
differences in circannual programming may also affect the fine adjustment of
rigid versus flexible timing
(Gwinner, 1996
;
Gwinner, 1999
;
Helm et al., 2005
).
The new data contribute to growing evidence for distinct circannual
rhythms. In stonechats, circannual cycles differed in phase and other more
subtle aspects. Siberian males did not regress testes entirely and lengthened
the first reproductive cycle (Fig.
4). The long first cycle resulted from early gonadal growth prior
to main testicular activation, similar to patterns observed in other
long-distance migrants under relatively long winter days
(Gwinner, 1988
;
Gwinner, 1989
;
Gwinner, 1996
;
Gwinner and Helm, 2003
).
Circannual differences had also emerged from comparisons with stonechats from
equatorial Africa, which showed particularly robust rhythmicity
(Gwinner, 1991
;
Gwinner, 1996
;
Helm, 2006
). Crossbreeding
experiments in several species support inherited schedules, as in F1 hybrids,
reproduction, postjuvenile moult and migratory restlessness were generally
timed intermediately (Davies et al.,
1969
; Berthold and Querner,
1993
; Gwinner,
1996
; Berthold,
2001
). In our present study, F1 hybrids generally fit this picture
(Fig. 3), with the clear
exception of the transition between breeding and moult. Hybrid gonadal
regression and moult onset, but not decrease in testosterone, resembled that
of Siberian stonechats, possibly indicating that dominance effects acted on
the inheritance of this particular phase of the annual cycle.
Our present study shows that geographically distinct schedules of a
songbird were primarily based on inherent differences in circannual
characteristics. Changes in the duration of reproductive inactivation and
activation, respectively, modified the phase of the annual cycle relative to
the external year and, consequently, the birds' responses to a given
daylength. The results emphasise that photoperiodism and circannual rhythms
function together and that findings for both mechanisms need to be integrated.
Circannual and photoperiodic studies have converged in documenting
geographically distinct time-keeping in birds and other organisms
(Joy and Mrosovsky, 1982
;
Gwinner, 1986
;
Silverin et al., 1993
;
Gwinner, 1996
;
Lambrechts et al., 1997
;
Heideman et al., 1999
;
Noskov et al., 1999
;
Helm et al., 2005
;
Bradshaw and Holzapfel, 2006
;
Bradshaw and Holzapfel, 2007
;
Hahn and MacDougall-Shackleton,
2008
; Silverin et al.,
2008
; Wikelski et al.,
2008
). Nevertheless, conceptual and experimental differences
between the two approaches have left uncertainty about the relative
contributions of photoperiodism and circannual rhythms to timing under natural
conditions. Organisms differ greatly in persistence of circannual cycles and
in the conditions under which they are expressed
(Prendergast et al., 2002
;
Goldman et al., 2004
;
Paul et al., 2008
). The
relevance of circannual programs is widely accepted for migration and
hibernation given complex photoperiodic conditions
(Aschoff, 1955
;
Hamner and Stocking, 1970
;
Gwinner, 1989
;
Gwinner, 1996
;
Gwinner and Helm, 2003
;
Sharp, 2005
;
Helm, 2006
) but has been
debated for reproduction because photoperiodic cues are usually available
(Farner, 1985
;
Dawson, 2007
;
Wikelski et al., 2008
). Our
data offer strong support for the hypothesis that circannual rhythms provide a
reference system for phase-specific timing responses, i.e. function as
periodically changing dispositions to respond to environmental cues
(Gwinner, 1999
). Dependence of
photoperiodic action on circannual phase has also been documented for other
organisms, notably trout, sheep and beetles
(Randall et al., 1998
;
Lincoln et al., 2005
;
Lincoln et al., 2006
;
Miyazaki et al., 2007
).
Together these studies show that daylength acts on circannual rhythms by
resetting the phase or by modulating the rate at which seasonal processes run
during a given fraction of the annual cycle (i.e. angular velocity)
(Gwinner, 1986
;
Gwinner and Helm, 2003
). Our
data add two important points for understanding circannual rhythms in the real
world. Firstly, we show that differences in circannual programming matter for
responses to naturally experienced conditions, i.e. relatively subtle
differences in photoperiod related to migration distance. Secondly, we show
that differences in circannual programming can explain geographically distinct
schedules of related taxa.
Evolutionary adjustment of circannual programming may be a potent way to
fit annual cycles to population-specific conditions. Analogous to circadian
clocks, timing could be enhanced by combining precise internal time
structuring with flexibility in response to external cues
(DeCoursey, 2004
). Photoperiod
is highly accurate but as a calendar, it is only useful if correctly related
to seasonal conditions (Goldman et al.,
2004
). As the relationship of photoperiod to environmental
conditions is variable, a need to readjust daylength responses may be common.
For instance, stonechats in most parts of Europe breed under increasing spring
daylength whereas closely related Canary Island stonechats breed in winter,
sometimes under still decreasing daylength
(Illera and Diaz, 2006
;
Illera et al., 2008
).
Furthermore, photoperiod times different seasonal functions, e.g. onset and
end of reproduction (Fig. 5) or
moult and migration, which may need to be independently adjusted
(Helm, 2006
;
Kumar et al., 2006
;
Piersma et al., 2008
). If
annual cycles and photoperiodism are separate processes, particular phases and
their interactions with daylength could be modified while the overall
circannual organisation is maintained. In this way, the fractions of the
circannual cycle that regulate various seasonal processes could react to
photoperiod such that in each population, particular timing relative to the
environment is achieved. The phase-specific action of photoperiod could be
thus tuned, in the course of evolution, to the annual cycles of those
`ultimate factors' (Baker,
1938
) that are relevant for a bird's fitness
(Gwinner, 1986
;
Helm, 2006
;
Wikelski et al., 2008
).
Whether or not circannual cycles persist under a given photoperiod may also
follow from adjustment to the conditions to which a population is exposed,
e.g. determining the daylength under which reproduction is reactivated
(Gwinner, 1988
;
Gwinner, 1989
;
Gwinner, 1996
). New
neuroendocrine studies suggest that such transitions may be achieved by
modified action on a common biological substrate
(Sharp, 2005
;
Paul et al., 2008
).
Rapid change of scheduling is imperative if organisms are to keep pace with
global change. Whether or not this challenge is met depends on underlying
mechanisms (Coppack and Pulido,
2004
; Nussey et al.,
2005
; Bradshaw and Holzapfel,
2006
; Bradshaw and Holzapfel,
2007
; Hedenström et al.,
2007
; Visser,
2008
). Understanding and predicting the changing seasonal
behaviour of organisms therefore requires detailed understanding of
time-keeping, including possible circannual contributions. For example,
earlier studies have reported advanced breeding schedules in long-distance
migrants under simulated daylengths of shorter migration routes
(Coppack et al., 2003
;
Coppack and Pulido, 2004
). This
finding was extrapolated to predict earlier breeding under climate change if
migration distances decrease. But as the present study shows, whether or not
migrants meet this prediction or, conversely, delay breeding after wintering
at higher latitudes (Fig. 5),
may depend on their underlying circannual programs.
Circannual rhythms have been documented in various organisms from plants to
primates (Pengelley, 1974
;
Gwinner, 1986
). Our data
suggest that they encode phase-specific responses to photoperiod in
population-specific ways. In species without sustained circannual cycles,
photoperiod-dependent timers may be modified to achieve similar purposes.
Either way, photoperiodism can only be properly understood if not only
photoperiod but also the underlying programming of photoperiodic responses is
taken into account (Gwinner,
1996
).
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
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