Abstract
Animals of the amphipod Orchestia montagui are kept in constant darkness with two short light pulses. One pulse is applied at the beginning of subjective night (around the dusk) and the other one at the end of subjective night (around the dawn). The pulse duration is estimated in the order of one or two hours around the dusk as well as the dawn. The locomotor activity rhythm was monitored in individual animals in summer under constant temperature. Results revealed that whatever the experimental conditions, under continuous or interrupted darkness by pulses, two endogenous components have been highlighted. In fact, Periodogram analysis showed the presence of ultradian and circadian periods around 12 and 24 h, respectively. The shortest circadian period and the most important inter-individual variability was observed under pulse of 2 h around the dusk with mean value equal to τDD+pulse = 24h38′ ± 4h34′. The activity profiles are in majority unimodal. Moreover, the most activity peak showed a slipping of its location from the middle of subjective night under constant darkness to the middle of subjective day under pulse. Globally, the locomotor activity rhythm of O. montagui was better defined under pulses and specimens were significantly more active under continuous darkness. Moreover, a great variability around the activity time was observed especially with pulse of 1 h.