Now we know why
birds sing in the spring! They are not quite in love, as we saw in cartoons
when we were children, although singing is somehow related to mating. It seems
that this “artistic” habit is rather related to hormones and seasonal changes
than to what we could call love.
According to a
new study conducted by a researcher teams from the Roslin Institute near Edinburgh and from Nagoya
University in Japan, it seems
that birds’ hormones are highly affected by spring and the changes this season
brings along. Practically, one could say that birds’ brain is affected by
seasons.
So, British and
Japanese scientists discovered that cells near the pituitary gland released a
hormone in the spring that was simply preparing birds for mating. Birds started
to sing more often in order to attract a potential mating partner.
According to Professor Peter
Sharp of the Roslin Institute, scientists haven’t known until now how exactly
birds’ brain is affected by seasonal change. "Now we have identified a key
element in the process of the brain's activity when spring arrives. Such
knowledge would have been impossible in the past but advances in technology
enabled us to scan thousands of genes so we could work out which ones are
affected by seasonal change," Professor Sharp said.
Researchers used a microarray,
that is a genome chip, in order to scan no less than 28,000 genes from the
Japanese quail, which received different lengths of light corresponding to
short, winter days and longer, spring days. Thus, researchers discovered that
birds’ brain’s cells were simply switched on when they received more light.
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