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American Zoologist 1995 35(3):246-258; doi:10.1093/icb/35.3.246
© 1995 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Endocrine Correlates of Seasonal Body Mass Dynamics in the Collared Lemming (Dicrostonyx groenlandicus)1

TIM R. NAGY2,3, BARBARA A. GOWER3 and MILTON H. STETSON
School of Life and Health Sciences, University of Delaware Newark, Delaware 19716

Correspondence: 2 To whom all correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed.

Many winter-active temperate rodent species show seasonal, photoperiod-mediated changes in body mass that correlate with changes in food availability, gaining mass when food is abundant. The collared lemming (Dicrostonyx groenlandicus), an arctic species, also undergoes a seasonal transition in body mass, but one that is temporally out of phase with that observed in species from lower latitudes; whereas temperate species increase in mass when exposed to relatively long day lengths, collared lemmings do so under long but decreasing day lengths. This adaptation may be in response tothe timing of peak above-ground biomass in the arctic. Validation of this hypothesis requires a more thorough examination of both collared lemmings and other arctic species.

In the collared lemming, photoperiod-mediated changes in body mass are correlated with changes in serum concentrations of prolactin, thyroid hormones, corticosterone, and growth hormone, and pineal concentrations of melatonin. These observations are compared to those obtained with temperate small mammals, and possible cause-and-effect relationships between body mass and hormonal parameters are discussed.


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