1 Isolated longitudinal muscle strips from the chicken rectum responded to isoprenaline, adrenaline and noradrenaline with a prolonged relaxation. The concentrations required to produce 50% of the maximum relaxation were 1.3 x 10-8 M for isoprenaline, 1.7 x 10-8 M for adrenaline and 10-6 M for noradrenaline. The relaxing potency of isoprenaline is about equal to that of adrenaline, but more than 50 times that of noradrenaline. 2 Propranolol, 3.4 x 10-6 M, blocked the isoprenaline-induced relaxation, and in the presence of this drug the responses to adrenaline and noradrenaline were converted into small, transient relaxations. The residual relaxation was blocked by phentolamine, 2.6 x 10-6 M. 3 These catecholamines suppressed spontaneous spike discharge and produced membrane hyperpolarization. Propranolol, 3.4 x 10-6 M, prevented the inhibitory effects of isoprenaline, and reduced but did not completely abolish those of adrenaline and noradrenaline. 4 Adrenaline and noradrenaline, but not isoprenaline, reduced membrane resistance in some preparations.5 In the rectal muscle of the chicken, the fl-adrenoceptor mediates a prolonged relaxation and the a-adrenoceptor a fast and short-lasting relaxation which is usually obscured by the fl-response and unmasked only after blockade of the P-adrenoceptors. The a-and f-mediated relaxations are each associated with the suppression of spontaneous spike activity.