Chronobiology is a field of
biology that examines time-related phenomena in living organisms. These cycles are important in many essential biological processes that occur in a "scheduled" fashion, such as eating, sleeping, mating, hibernating, migration, and cellular regeneration.
The most important rhythm in chronobiology is the circadian rhythm, which refers to the 24-hour daily biological cycle; however, many other important cycles are also studied, including:
- Infradian rhythms[?], which are long-term cycles, such as the annual migration or reproduction cycles found in certain animals or the monthly menstrual cycle of human females.
- Ultradian rhythms[?], which are short cycles, such as the 90-minute REM cycle in sleep or the 3 hour cycle of growth hormone production.
- Tidal rhythms[?], commonly observed in marine life, which follow the (roughly) 12-hour transition from high to low tide and back.
Related to, but not part of, chronobiology is the unsubstantiated theory of biorhythms, which are said to be a set of cyclic variations in human behaviour. The theory has no known physiological basis, and is considered by most people to be pseudoscience.