EFFECTS OF PHASIC AND TONIC LIGHT INPUTS ON THE ORCADIAN ORGANIZATION OF THE SQUIRREL MONKEY |
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Authors: | Frank M. Sulzman Charles A. Fuller Martin C. Moore-Ede |
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Affiliation: | Department of Physiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract— The organization of the circadian timing system in Saimiri sciureus was probed using the phasic (abrupt transition) and tonic (continuous action) effects of light intensity. The behavior of the simultaneously monitored circadian rhythms of feeding behavior, colonic temperature, and urinary potassium excretion was studied in response to the phasic effects of (a) an abrupt 8-h phase delay in the light–dark (LD) cycle and (b) a series of non-24 h LD cycles ( T = 18 to 30 h). These studies demonstrated that the feeding and temperature rhythms were more tightly coupled to the light-dark cycle than was the rhythm of urinary potassium excretion. The tonic effects of constant levels of illumination confirmed this conclusion. In constant light, internal desynchronization spontaneously occurred in 25% of animals with the potassium rhythm exhibiting a period quite different from that of the feeding and colonic temperature rhythms. Thus, the response of the internal circadian timekeeping system to phasic and tonic light inputs shows that the system in this species comprises at least two potentially independent oscillators with differential light sensitivities. |
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