Spermatogenesis in the Budgerigar can be arrested by reducing the birds' photoperiod to 8 hours of daylight or less. When this occurs, Sertoli cell cytoplasm shows a great increase in the size and number of residual bodies, while the smooth endoplasmic reticulum is reduced. If the bird is kept at 8 hours of daylight for some weeks large lipid droplets are seen in Sertoli cytoplasm, and degenerated spermatids are apparently phagocytosed. The interstitium shows fewer active Leydig cells, a paucity of lipids and occasional ovoid mitochondria. The basal lamellae of the tubule which are thick and convoluted before and during spermatogenesis become thinner and straighter. It is thought that these morphological changes reflect changes in metabolic activity.
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