Seasonal patterns of melatonin, cortisol, and progesterone secretion in female lambs raised beneath a 500-kV transmission line | | Posted on:1993-10-07 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Dissertation | | University:Portland State University | Candidate:Lee, Jack Monroe, Jr | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:1472390014997146 | Subject:Biology | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | There is ongoing controversy about the possibility of adverse biological effects from environmental exposures to electric and magnetic fields. These fields are produced by all electrical equipment and appliances including electrical transmission lines. The objective of this environmental science study was to investigate the possible effects of a high voltage transmission line on domestic sheep (Ovis aries L.), a species that can often be found near such lines.;The study was primarily designed to determine whether a specific effect of electric and magnetic fields found in laboratory animals also occurs in livestock under natural environmental conditions. The effect is the ability of fields, at levels found in the environment, to significantly depress the normally high nocturnal concentrations of the pineal hormone-melatonin.;Ten female Suffolk lambs were penned for 10 months directly beneath a 500-kV transmission line near Estacada, Oregon. Ten other lambs of the same type were penned in a control area away from the transmission line where electric and magnetic fields were at ambient levels.;Serum melatonin was analyzed by radioimmunoassay (RIA) from 6618 blood samples collected at 0.5 to 3-hour intervals over eight 48-hour periods. Serum progesterone was analyzed by RIA from blood samples collected twice weekly. Serum cortisol was also assayed by RIA from the blood samples collected during the 48-hour samples.;Results showed that lambs in both the control and line groups had the typical pattern of melatonin secretion consisting of low daytime and high nighttime serum concentrations. There were no statistically significant differences between groups in melatonin levels, or in the phase or duration of the nighttime melatonin elevation. Age at puberty and number of reproductive cycles also did not differ between groups.;Serum cortisol showed a circadian rhythm with highest concentrations during the day. There were, however, no differences in cortisol concentrations between groups.;Statistical analyses on other biological parameters revealed no differences between groups for body weight gain, wool growth, or behavior. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | Transmission line, Electric and magnetic fields, Melatonin, Lambs, Cortisol, Blood samples collected | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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