Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8977374 | Behavioural Processes | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Some pairings had to be separated to prevent injuries so the pairing procedure introduced a selection for non-aggressive socially tolerant mice. Social status was nevertheless found to be associated with pre-existing differences in urinary corticosterone in the CD-1 strain: mice that later became dominant had overall lower levels of urinary corticosterone compared to subordinates. In conclusion, urinary corticosterone levels indicated clear differences in physiology, likely to be related to the adrenal stress response, dependent on both strain and social status. Thus, this non-invasive measure could help to predict the welfare outcomes of social housing and how these may depend on dominance status, rather than overall levels of aggression, in different strains of mice.
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Authors
Ann E. Fitchett, Sarah A. Collins, Howard Mason, Christopher J. Barnard, Helen J. Cassaday,