The effects of different alpha-2 agonists on the spontaneous motility in naive and morphine tolerant mice were studied. Clonidine caused a reduction at the lower (1-3 micrograms Kg-1 i.p.) and higher (100 micrograms Kg-1 i.p.) doses and no effect at 10-30 micrograms Kg-1 i.p. in naive mice, while an increase was found at the intermediate doses (10-30 micrograms Kg-1 i.p.) in morphine tolerant mice. The clonidine-induced inhibition on spontaneous motility at the lower and higher doses was prevented both in naive and tolerant mice by idazoxan pretreatment. In morphine-treated animals the increase induced by clonidine was antagonized by prazosin. The action of guanabenz and guanfacine on locomotion differed from clonidine, by producing inhibition only at higher doses (100-300 micrograms Kg-1 i.p.). Clonidine, but not guanfacine or guanabenz, prevented the withdrawal syndrome precipitated by naloxone. Thus the only alpha-2 agonistic properties do not appear sufficient to explain the prevention of morphine abstinence by clonidine in mice, which can represent a single model to screen anti-withdrawal drugs.