Absence of Nocturnal Plasma Melatonin Surge Under Long and Short Artificial Photoperiods in the Domestic Sow

Abstract
The circadian plasma melatonin profile of German Landrace sows was determined at 1-h intervals for 31 h after exposure to each of four different artificial photoperiods. Under 12L:12D, melatonin concentrations in four sows during the light phase ranged from 22 ± 5.9 to 96 ± 25.1 pg/ml (mean ± SEM). During the dark phase (total dark) the individual concentrations increased two-to fivefold over the peak individual light phase values in three sows. This nocturnal surge was of 3.8 h duration and peaked at 190, 294, and 546 pg/ml at 0100 h, which was 5.5 h after the onset of dark. The surge was abolished in these animals after exposure to 16L:8D and could not be reinstated by the subsequent exposure to 8L:16D. During the latter two photoperiods the mean concentrations were consistently less than the maximum mean value of 30.8 ± 10 pg/ml during the dark phase and 55 ± 21.9 pg/ml during the light phase. All the sows displayed regular estrous cycles during the study, and the day of the estrous cycle on which the samples were obtained under each photoperiod was not significantly correlated with the presence or absence of the nocturnal surge. A separate experiment using different animals confirmed the nocturnal surge under 12L:12D. In two out of four cycling sows the peak concentrations during the dark phase (122 and 110 pg/ml at 0400 and 0500 h) were two-to sixfold higher than those of the light phase. Absence of the nocturnal surge under long and short daylengths may be a factor contributing to the decline in reproductive performance during the summer and winter months.