Ontogenesis of both vagal control of heart rate and the baroreceptor vagal reflex were evaluated in rats at postnatal ages (P) of 5/6, 10, 15, 20, 25 and >>42 days anaesthetised with urethane (1.5 g/kg). Between P5/6 and P25 heart rate rose from 372 +/- 12 to 448 +/- 20 beats per minute and mean arterial pressure increased from 33.9 +/- 3.1 to 74.59 +/- 3.25 mm Hg (mean +/- SEM, n = 7 and 11 respectively). Cardiac vagal tone was absent at P10 but significant at P20 (P < 0.05) as revealed with atropine (0.5-1 mg/kg i.v.). Baroreceptor cardiac reflex sensitivity, tested with phenylephrine (10-50 microg/kg i.v.), was attenuated significantly in P10-20 rats compared with P5/6, P25 and mature animals. In P14-17 rats stimulation of neurones in either the solitary tract or ambiguual nuclei, by microinjection of L-glutamate (100-200 pmol), evoked an atropine-sensitive bradycardia indicating a functional integrity of central and peripheral efferent pathways mediating the baroreceptor reflex. Thus, the baroreceptor vagal reflex is functional in P5/6 rats but becomes attenuated between P10-P20, which is coincident with the maturational rise in arterial pressure.