| Literature DB >> 22479340 |
Brianna N Gaskill1, Christopher J Gordon, Edmond A Pajor, Jeffrey R Lucas, Jerry K Davis, Joseph P Garner.
Abstract
In laboratories, mice are housed at 20-24°C, which is below their lower critical temperature (≈30°C). This increased thermal stress has the potential to alter scientific outcomes. Nesting material should allow for improved behavioral thermoregulation and thus alleviate this thermal stress. Nesting behavior should change with temperature and material, and the choice between nesting or thermotaxis (movement in response to temperature) should also depend on the balance of these factors, such that mice titrate nesting material against temperature. Naïve CD-1, BALB/c, and C57BL/6 mice (36 male and 36 female/strain in groups of 3) were housed in a set of 2 connected cages, each maintained at a different temperature using a water bath. One cage in each set was 20°C (Nesting cage; NC) while the other was one of 6 temperatures (Temperature cage; TC: 20, 23, 26, 29, 32, or 35°C). The NC contained one of 6 nesting provisions (0, 2, 4, 6, 8, or 10g), changed daily. Food intake and nest scores were measured in both cages. As the difference in temperature between paired cages increased, feed consumption in NC increased. Nesting provision altered differences in nest scores between the 2 paired temperatures. Nest scores in NC increased with increasing provision. In addition, temperature pairings altered the difference in nest scores with the smallest difference between locations at 26°C and 29°C. Mice transferred material from NC to TC but the likelihood of transfer decreased with increasing provision. Overall, mice of different strains and sexes prefer temperatures between 26-29°C and the shift from thermotaxis to nest building is seen between 6 and 10 g of material. Our results suggest that under normal laboratory temperatures, mice should be provided with no less than 6 grams of nesting material, but up to 10 grams may be needed to alleviate thermal distress under typical temperatures.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22479340 PMCID: PMC3316552 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0032799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Titration apparatuses.
(a) Diagram showing the configuration of water baths and cages for testing cage temperature and nesting material preferences. (b) Diagram depicting elements present in water bath and cage setup. The figures are reproduced with permission from Elsevier [5], [6]
Ethogram of observed behaviors.
| Category | Behavior | Description |
| Active | General locomotion | All locomotive behavior performed on the cage lid, climbing up the cage bars by the food hopper to reach the lid, and locomotion on the floor of the cage. |
| Rearing | Seen on the floor of the cage with all an animal’s weight on its hind legs and front legs off the ground. Sniffing movements while on its hind legs were commonly accompanied with this behavior. | |
| Sniffing | Sniffing was also performed against the cage floor (ground), or in between the bars of the cage lid. Slight upward jerks of the head were seen. | |
| Maintenance | Grooming | All grooming behavior including licking the fur, grooming with the forepaws, and scratching with any limb. Grooming was usually performed in a sitting position with the animal’s hind quarters in contact with the floor. |
| Feeding or drinking | The animal would rear up to gnaw at food pellets through the bars of the hopper. The forepaws would usually be used to hold the food pellet steady. The animal would rear up and lick the nipple drinker. | |
| Inactive | Sleeping | The animal was motionless, and either lying curled up on its side, or sitting curled up, with its face tucked into its body and out of sight of the camera. Occasionally interrupted by brief single twitches of the body. |
| Still and alert | The animal was sitting or curled up, but in contrast to sleep, the face was lifted. The animal either sat motionless, or would appear to be orientating its head to sounds outside of the cage. | |
| Inactive in nest | The animal within the nest, due to camera angles, cannot clearly be seen but no movement within the nest can be detected. It is assumed that the animal is sleeping within the nest. This is distinguishable from other behaviors within the nest because movement within the nest or of the nest itself is not observed. | |
| Nesting | Pull in | Characterized by the animal reaching out of the nest and pulling sawdust or nesting material to the edge of the nest. The animal may also grasp the material in its mouth and drag it into the nest site. Gathering is distinct from locomotion in that the hind legs do not leave the nest site, and each time the animal reaches out of the nest it pulls its forelegs back in. |
| Carrying | Locomotion with material, such as large pieces of bedding or nesting material in the mouth. | |
| Fraying | The animal uses sideways movement of the forepaws to draw material through the beak. Gnawing movements of the jaw and jerking movements with the head are also seen. As a result the edges of the nesting material are bitten off or large pieces of bedding are split into smaller fibers. | |
| Push-Dig | The forward pushing and kicking of substrate material with fast alternating movements with the forepaws often combined with forward locomotion. | |
| Sorting | The deliberate action of placing specific nesting material strips or bedding material into a particular location while sitting within the nest site. | |
| Digging | Removing, or apparently trying to remove, substrate material from a certain place by series of fast alternating movement of the forepaws, as a consequence of which the material heaps up under the abdomen of the animal. | |
| Scrape-dig | The series of forepaw movements are alternated by a few hindwards kicking movements of both hind legs simultaneously, through which the heap under the abdomen of the animal is transported further backwards. | |
| Fluffing | An unseen nesting behavior, due to insufficient camera angles or view from inside the nest, which results in the enlargement of the nest from the inside. Walls of the nest will appear to jump and the nest as a whole will enlarge. It is assumed that the animal is hollowing out the inside of the nest by pushing the walls back and up. | |
| Unknown in Nest | Unknown | An animal is inside of the nest but unsure of the behavior being occurring inside of the nest. This is different from Fluffing in that the nest does not appear to be growing or occurs out of the sequence on nest building. This is also different from Inactive in Nest in that movement is seen within the nest. |
| Unknown | Unknown | An animal’s behavior cannot be determined or the view of the animal is blocked while in or outside of the nest. |
Figure 2The mean difference in nest score values between the nesting cage and the temperature cage.
Nest scores partitioned by occurrences of nesting material carryover by (a) cage sets and (b) amount of material provided. A negative value indicates a better nest built in the temperature cage and a positive value indicates a better nest in the nesting cage. LSM and SE are plotted and significant t-tests (value different from zero; α corrected for the number of comparisons) are indicated by asterisks. A diagonal line indicates a significant linear trend and a curved line indicates a significant quadratic trend.
Figure 3Likelihood of nesting material being transferred to the temperature cage.
Data is plotted by (a) sex and temperature; (b) strain and temperature and; (c) amount of nesting material and strain. Quadratic peaks are indicated by solid vertical lines.
Figure 4Location preference due to temperature-set.
Fold difference in percent of location observations between the nesting cage relative to the temperature cage. Effects of temperature-set are plotted by interactions with (a) sex; (b) strain and; (c) behavior. LSM and SE are plotted and significant t-tests (value different from zero-α corrected for the number of comparisons) are indicated by asterisks.
Figure 5Location preference by titrated variables.
Mean difference in percent of observations between the nesting cage and the temperature cage for the temperature-set by amount of nesting material interaction. The green area indicates equal preference for NC and TC. Blue and purple shading indicate a 2 and 4 fold preference for NC. Orange and red shading indicate 2 and 4 fold preferences for TC.
Figure 6Location preference due to amount of nesting material.
Fold difference in percent of observations between the nesting cage relative to the temperature cage. Effects of the amount of nesting material provided are plotted by interactions with (a) sex; (b) strain and; (c) behavior. LSM and SE are plotted and significant t-tests (value different from zero-α corrected for the number of comparisons) are indicated by asterisks.