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Stress


Title:Mild effects of gestational stress and social reactivity on the onset of mother-young interactions and bonding in sheep
Author(s):Coulon M; Levy F; Ravel C; Nowak R; Boissy A;
Address:"UMR1213 Herbivores, INRA , Saint-Genes-Champanelle , France"
Journal Title:Stress
Year:2014
Volume:17
Issue:6
Page Number:460 - 470
DOI: 10.3109/10253890.2014.969238
ISSN/ISBN:1607-8888 (Electronic) 1025-3890 (Linking)
Abstract:"Consequences of prenatal stress on mother-young relationships are well-documented in altricial mammals but less so in precocial mammals. In this study, we investigated the effects of unpredictable aversive events on maternal behavior and mutual mother-young recognition in pregnant ewes while accounting for modulatory effects of ewe reactivity. From a population of 120 Romane-breed ewes, we selected 20 high-responsive (HR) and 20 low-responsive (LR) ewes according to pre-mating reactivity assessed in isolation tests. Over the final third of pregnancy, 10 HR ewes and 10 LR ewes were exposed daily to various aversive events such as social isolation, mixing and transport (stressed ewes), while the other 20 ewes were not exposed to aversive events (control ewes). Although the treatment induced chronic stress, physiologically confirmed by an increase in salivary cortisol following transport and sham shearing, maternal behavior of stressed ewes observed during the first 30 min postpartum and in the selectivity test 1 h 30 min later did not differ from controls. However, in a maternal motivation test performed 48 h postpartum, stressed ewes vocalized less than controls when separated from their lambs, and walked less readily past an unknown object to reach their lambs. Lambs of stressed ewes spent more time near their dam in a preference test performed 15 h after birth compared to control-ewe lambs. HR ewes spent more time grooming their lambs than LR ewes. We posit that domestication could have selected animals displaying robust expression of maternal behavior related to social reactivity and producing offspring that are better adapted to challenging situations"
Keywords:"Adaptation, Psychological Animals Animals, Newborn Anxiety, Separation/psychology *Behavior, Animal Choice Behavior Chronic Disease Disease Models, Animal Female Gestational Age Grooming Hydrocortisone/metabolism *Maternal Behavior Motivation *Object Atta;"
Notes:"MedlineCoulon, Marjorie Levy, Frederic Ravel, Christine Nowak, Raymond Boissy, Alain eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't England 2014/09/27 Stress. 2014 Dec; 17(6):460-70. doi: 10.3109/10253890.2014.969238"

 
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