Abstract
Talorchestia quoyana, a sand beach amphipod, shows a rhythm of locomotor activity controlled by a circadian clock and an inhibitory circatidal clock. This article reports on an investigation of the entrainment of the circadian dock to skeleton photoperiods. Four important mathematical models for circadian rhythms are examined with respect to the results of the entrainment experiments and to predictions from the phase response curve for Talorchestia. Significant differences between the models are described, and properties of circadian rhythms not accounted for by present models are outlined.