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Marked for life? Effects of early cage-cleaning frequency, delivery batch, and identification tail-marking on rat anxiety profiles

✍ Scribed by Charlotte C. Burn; Robert M.J. Deacon; Georgia J. Mason


Book ID
102144235
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
189 KB
Volume
50
Category
Article
ISSN
0012-1630

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Daily handling of preweanling rats reduces their adult anxiety. Even routine cage‐cleaning, involving handling, reduces adult anxiety compared with controls. Cage‐cleaning regimes differ between animal breeders, potentially affecting rodent anxiety and experimental results. Here, 92 adult male rats given different cage‐cleaning rates as pups, were compared on plus‐maze, hyponeophagia, corticosterone, and handling tests. They were pair‐housed and half were tail‐marked for identification. Anxiety/stress profiles were unaffected by cage‐cleaning frequency, suggesting that commercial‐typical differences in husbandry contribute little variance to adult rat behavior. However, delivery batch affected some elevated plus‐maze measures. Also, tail‐marked rats spent three times longer on the plus‐maze open arms than their unmarked cagemates, suggesting reduced anxiety, yet paradoxically they showed greater chromodacryorrhoea responses to handling, implying increased aversion to human contact. A follow‐up study showed that rats avoided the odor released from the marker pen used. Thus, apparently trivial aspects of procedure can greatly affect experimental results. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 50: 266–277, 2008.