Abstract
Beginning at 42 weeks of age undernourished females that had been maintained outdoors were exposed to long days (15L:9D) or short days (9L:15D). After 6 weeks, both groups were placed on short days, and ad-libitum feeding was begun. Rapid ''catch-up'' growth occurred similarly in both groups. However, the response to oestradiol negative feedback regulation of LH secretion differed greatly. Short-day lambs remained hyperresponsive to oestradiol inhibition, and circulating LH remained low, a condition that typifies immaturity of the system governing LH secretion. In the females exposed to the long-day-short-day sequence, circulating LH began to increase 10 weeks after the end of long days; this change is characteristic of the neuroendocrine alteration that occurs during puberty. These findings indicate that the growth-retarded lamb can differentiate long days from short days, and can therefore continue to accumulate photoperiod information during prolonged periods of undernutrition.