Literature DB >> 15775029

Enrichment strategies for laboratory animals from the viewpoint of clinical veterinary behavioral medicine: emphasis on cats on dogs.

Karen L Overall1, Donna Dyer.   

Abstract

Behavioral wellness has become a recent focus for the care of laboratory animals, farm and zoo animals, and pets. Behavioral enrichment issues for these groups are more similar than dissimilar, and each group can learn from the other. The emphasis on overall enhancement for laboratory dogs and cats in this review includes an emphasis on behavioral enrichment. Understanding the range of behaviors, behavioral choices, and cognitive stimulation that cats and dogs exhibit under non-laboratory conditions can increase the ability of investigators to predict which enrichments are likely to be the most successful in the laboratory. Many of the enrichment strategies described are surprisingly straightforward and inexpensive to implement.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15775029     DOI: 10.1093/ilar.46.2.202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ILAR J        ISSN: 1084-2020


  8 in total

1.  Conditioning laboratory cats to handling and transport.

Authors:  Margaret E Gruen; Andrea E Thomson; Gillian P Clary; Alexandra K Hamilton; Lola C Hudson; Rick B Meeker; Barbara L Sherman
Journal:  Lab Anim (NY)       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 12.625

2.  Injury related to environmental enrichment in a dog (Canis familiaris): gastric foreign body.

Authors:  Christin L Veeder; Douglas K Taylor
Journal:  J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 1.232

3.  Behavioural and faecal glucocorticoid metabolite responses of single caging in six cats over 30 days.

Authors:  J J Ellis; V Protopapadaki; H Stryhn; J Spears; M S Cockram
Journal:  Vet Rec Open       Date:  2014-11-08

Review 4.  Environmental Aspects of Domestic Cat Care and Management: Implications for Cat Welfare.

Authors:  Judith L Stella; Candace C Croney
Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal       Date:  2016-09-28

5.  Enrichment Preferences of FIV-Infected and Uninfected Laboratory-Housed Cats.

Authors:  Claudia J Kennedy; Andrea E Thomson; Emily H Griffith; Jonathan Fogle; B Duncan X Lascelles; Rick B Meeker; Barbara L Sherman; Margaret E Gruen
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2018-07-03       Impact factor: 5.048

Review 6.  Recommended housing densities for research mice: filling the gap in data-driven alternatives.

Authors:  Karen L Svenson; Beverly Paigen
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2018-12-06       Impact factor: 5.834

7.  The predictive value of early behavioural assessments in pet dogs--a longitudinal study from neonates to adults.

Authors:  Stefanie Riemer; Corsin Müller; Zsófia Virányi; Ludwig Huber; Friederike Range
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-07-08       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Effect of a Pheromone on Stress-Associated Reactivation of Feline Herpesvirus-1 in Experimentally Inoculated Kittens.

Authors:  Elena T Contreras; E Hodgkins; V Tynes; A Beck; F Olea-Popelka; M R Lappin
Journal:  J Vet Intern Med       Date:  2017-12-08       Impact factor: 3.333

  8 in total

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