INVESTIGADORES
VALENTINUZZI veronica Sandra
artículos
Título:
Circadian pattern of wheel-running activity of a South American subterranean rodent (Ctenomys cf knightii)
Autor/es:
VALENTINUZZI VS; ODA GA; ARAUJO JF; RALPH MR
Revista:
CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL
Editorial:
Taylor & Francis
Referencias:
Lugar: London; Año: 2009 vol. 26 p. 14 - 27
ISSN:
0742-0528
Resumen:
Circadian rhythms are regarded as essentially ubiquitous features of animal behavior, and are thought to confer important adaptive advantages. However, although circadian systems of rodents have been among the most extensively studied, most comparative biology is restricted to a few related species. In this study, circadian organization of locomotor activity was studied in the subterranean, solitary north Argentinean rodent, Ctenomys knightii. The genus, Ctenomys, commonly known as Tuco-tucos, comprises more than 50 known species over a range that extends from 12°S latitude into Patagonia, and includes at least one social species. The genus, therefore, is ideal for comparative and ecological studies of circadian rhythms. Ctenomys knightii is the first of these to be studied for its circadian behavior. All animals were wild caught but adapted quickly to laboratory conditions, with clear and precise activity-rest rhythms in a light-dark (LD) cycle and strongly nocturnal wheel running behavior. In constant dark (DD) the rhythm expression persisted with free-running periods always longer than 24 hours. Upon reinstatement of the light-dark cycle, rhythms resynchronized rapidly with large phase advances in 7/8 animals. In constant light (LL), six animals had free-running periods shorter than in DD, and 4/8 showed evidence of ‘splitting’. We conclude that under laboratory conditions, in wheel-running cages, this species shows a clear nocturnal rhythmic organization, controlled by an endogenous circadian pacemaker that is entrained to 24 hr LD cycles predominantly by light-induced advances, and shows the same interindividual variable responses to constant light as reported in other non-subterranean species.  These data are the first step toward understanding the chronobiology of the largest genus of subterranean rodents.