The intrinsic properties of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), the site of the main circadian pacemaker in mammals, have recently been studied in vitro by means of organotypic slice culturing. So far, only neonatal rats and mice have been used for such developmental and functional analyses of the isolated pacemaker. Here, the authors present a comparative developmental study of the SCN of voles, rats, and hamsters in organotypic slice cultures. In contrast to strictly circadian organization of behavior in rats and hamsters, common voles (Microtus arvalis) are characterized by large variability in the strength of circadian organization of behavior. It is not known to what extent this variability is reflected in the intrinsic features of the ...