To examine the role of thyroid hormones in the seasonal breeding cycle in Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata fuscata), sexually mature females were thyroidectomized (n = 6) in early December, during the midbreeding season, or they received sham operations (n = 4). They were housed indoors individually, and blood samples were collected two to three times a week to monitor gonadotropin and gonadal steroid hormone secretions. Control monkeys exhibited ovulatory cycles during the breeding season. The mean dates of onset and end of the ovulatory cycles were October 22 +/- 13 d and February 25 +/- 14 d, respectively. These dates coincided well with those of our colonies under captivity. By contrast, three of the six thyroidectomized monkeys terminated ovulatory cycles immediately after operations; the remaining three monkeys ovulated only once or twice after thyroid removal The mean dates of onset and end of the ovulatory cycles of thyroidectomized monkeys were October 18 +/- 4 d and December 31 +/- 4 d, respectively. This was a significantly earlier termination of the ovulatory cycles than in controls. Mean concentrations of plasma thyroxine of control monkeys were maintained throughout the experimental period, whereas plasma thyroxine concentrations of thyroidectomized monkeys decreased abruptly to undetectable levels. Thyroidectomized monkeys exhibited significantly higher levels of plasma prolactin (PRL) than controls. Moreover, even in control monkeys, plasma PRL increased during the transition out of the breeding season. These results suggest that thyroid hormones play an important role in the regulation of ovulatory cycles in Japanese monkeys, directory or indirectly, possibly by mediating the changes of PRL secretion.