Data from: When the sun never sets: diverse activity rhythms under continuous daylight in free-living arctic-breeding birds ...

Circadian clocks are centrally involved in the regulation of daily behavioural and physiological processes. These clocks are synchronized to the 24 h day by external cues (Zeitgeber), the most important of which is the light–dark cycle. In polar environments, however, the strength of the Zeitgeber i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Steiger, Silke S., Valcu, Mihai, Spoelstra, Kamiel, Helm, Barbara, Wikelski, Martin, Kempenaers, Bart
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.4g1g0
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.4g1g0
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Summary:Circadian clocks are centrally involved in the regulation of daily behavioural and physiological processes. These clocks are synchronized to the 24 h day by external cues (Zeitgeber), the most important of which is the light–dark cycle. In polar environments, however, the strength of the Zeitgeber is greatly reduced around the summer and winter solstices (continuous daylight or continuous darkness). How animals time their behaviour under such conditions has rarely been studied in the wild. Using a radio-telemetry-based system, we investigated daily activity rhythms under continuous daylight in Barrow, Alaska, throughout the breeding season in four bird species that differ in mating system and parental behaviour. We found substantial diversity in daily activity rhythms depending on species, sex and breeding stage. Individuals exhibited either robust, entrained 24 h activity cycles, were continuously active (arrhythmic) or showed ‘free-running’ activity cycles. In semipalmated sandpipers, a shorebird with ... : Steiger_et_al_2013 ...