Summary
The activity rhythms of 5 flying squirrels,Glaucomys volans, and 7 chipmunks,Tamias striatus, were examined under controlled conditions in the laboratory. Free-running, circadian rhythms were demonstrated using a total of 25 LL or DD experiments. With 46 LD schedules the limits of entrainment in a 24-hour day were determined, and the phase angle difference for each schedule measured.Glaucomys was able to synchronize to schedules ranging from 1 second of light per 24-hour day to at least 18 hours light per day with little or no change in the phase angle.Tamias showed an oscillatory type of entrainment when the photoperiod was less than 3 hours per 24-hour day or greater than 23 hours, but in the intervening region was capable of stable entrainment. A tendency was evident for the phase angle difference to become less positive as the LD ratio increased. InGlaucomys single, isolated light pulses of either one second or 24 hours duration were able to bring about relatively large shifts in the phase of the activity rhythm.
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Dedicated to Professor Jürgen Aschoff on the occasion of his 60th birthday.
I wish to acknowledge the hospitality and assistance of the Zoology Department, University of Wisconsin, Madison, the Max-Planck Institute, Erling-Andechs, Germany, and the Belle W. Baruch Coastal Research Institute, University of South Carolina, Columbia. Special thanks are due Dr. John Emlen and Dr. William Reeder of Madison, Prof. J. Aschoff of Erling-Andechs, Dr. John Vernberg and Dr. Winona Vernberg of Columbia, and my husband, Dr. George DeCoursey, for their untiring encouragement and help with these experiments.
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DeCoursey, P.J. LD ratios and the entrainment of circadian activity in a nocturnal and a diurnal rodent. J. Comp. Physiol. 78, 221–235 (1972). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00697656
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00697656