RESUMO
Seasonally breeding animals, such as green anole lizards (Anolis carolinensis), allow for the examination of the control of reproduction during different reproductive states. During the breeding season, the gonads are large and reproductively active. Following the breeding season, gonads regress and become less active, and the lizards enter a refractory period where breeding is inhibited. After this stage, a post-refractory period occurs during which the lizards are still in a non-breeding state, but environmental changes can trigger the onset of breeding. However, it is unclear what causes these changes in reproductive state and we hypothesized that this may be due to alterations in gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) signaling. The present study aimed to identify morphological and behavioral differences in GnRH- and saline-injected refractory and post-refractory male anoles when housed under the same non-breeding environmental conditions. We found that post-refractory anoles had increased testicular weight, recrudescence, sperm presence, and reproductive behavior, with no impact of GnRH injection. Renal sex segment size and steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) mRNA levels did not differ among groups, indicating that testosterone levels likely had not increased in post-refractory lizards. Post-refractory anoles in this study were beginning to transition towards a breeding state without exposure to changing environmental conditions, and GnRH was not necessary for these changes. These data reveal a complex interaction between the activation of breeding, changing environmental conditions, and the underlying physiology regulating reproduction in seasonally breeding lizards. Future studies are needed to further elucidate the mechanisms that regulate this relationship.