Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T17:27:11.221Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Effects of Intrusion on the Behaviour of Caged Laboratory Rats (Rattus Norvegicus): Consequences for Welfare

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2023

R Barclay*
Affiliation:
Harpley House, 108 Main Street, Hayton, Retford, Notts DN22 9LH
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

This experiment examines the consequences and welfare implications of the introduction of new rats to established (resident) caged laboratory rat groups. The effects on investigatory and aggressive behaviours of the established and the newly introduced rats were measured. The aggressive status within each established resident group was known prior to the introduction; the status of each intruder rat was also known. Single-sex groups of both male and female residents and intruders were studied. Two important conclusions arise from the results of the experiment. First, contrary to reports in a number of publications, there were no effects of male resident social status on their investigatory or aggressive behaviour towards male intruder rats. There was, however, a significant effect of social status among female residents on their investigatory behaviour towards intruders; unexpectedly, it was the subordinates followed by the dominant animals that showed the highest investigatory response. Second, aggression by intruders of both sexes depended upon their social status in their resident group. In the case of male intruders, aggressive behaviour towards residents was a reflection of their previous social status irrespective of how much aggression they received from residents. Among females, a similar pattern emerged, with the dominant females initiating the most aggression; however, this behaviour was dependent upon how much aggression was received from residents and on the resident’s social status, with resident subordinates and dominants responding with the most aggressive behaviour. The results are interpreted in terms of putative competitive strategies adopted by rats in a confined (cage) environment, and their welfare implications are discussed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2001 UfAW, The Old School, Brewhouse Hill, Wheathampstead, Herts ALA 8AN, UK

References

Adams, Ν 1985 Establishment of dominance in domesticated Norway rats: effects of the degrees of captivity and social experience. Animal Learning and Behaviour 13: 9397CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Albert, D J, Walsh, M L, Gorzalka, B B, Siemens, Y and Louie, H 1986 Testosterone removal in rats results in a decrease in social aggression and a loss of social dominance. Physiology and Behavior 36: 401407CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Albert, D J, Jonik, R H and Walsh, M L 1992 Interaction of estradiol, testosterone and progesterone in the modulation of hormone-dependent aggression in the female rat. Physiology and Behavior 52: 773779CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Albonetti, M E and Farabollini, F 1993 Effects of single and repeated restraint on the social behaviour of male rats. Physiology and Behavior 53: 937942CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barnett, P 1975 The Rat: A Study in Behaviour. University of Chicago Press: Chicago, USAGoogle Scholar
Bermond, B 1981 Effects of androgen treatment of full-grown puberally castrated rats upon male sexual behaviour, intermale aggressive behaviour and the sequential patterning of aggressive interactions. Behaviour 80: 143173CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blanchard, R J, Fukunaga, K, Blanchard, D C and Kelley, M J 1975 Conspecific aggression in the laboratory rat. Journal of Comparative Physiology and Psychology 89: 12041209CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blanchard, R J, Takahashi, L K and Blanchard, D C 1977a The development of intruder attack in colonies of laboratory rats. Animal Learning and Behaviour 5: 365369CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blanchard, R J, Blanchard, D C, Takahashi, T and Kelley, M J 1977b Attack and defensive behaviour in the albino rat. Animal Behaviour 25: 622634CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blanchard, D C, Fukunaga-Stinson, C, Takahashi, L K, Flannelly, K J and Blanchard, R J 1984 Dominance and aggression in social groups of male and female rats. Behavioural Proceedings 9: 3148CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blanchard, R J, Blanchard, D J and Flannelly, K J 1985 Social stress, mortality and aggression in colonies and burrowing habitats. Behavioral Processes 11: 209213CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blanchard, R J, Flannelly, K J and Blanchard, D J 1988 Life-span studies of dominance and aggression in established colonies of laboratory rats. Physiology and Behavior 45: 17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brain, P F, Benton, D, Howell, Ρ A and Jones, S E 1980 Resident rats’ aggression toward intruders. Animal Learning and Behaviour 8: 331335CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calhoun, J Β 1962 The Ethology and Sociology of the Norway Rat. USPHS Publication No. 1008. Government Printing Office: Washington DC, USAGoogle Scholar
DeBold, J and Miczek, K A 1984 Aggression persists after ovariectomy in female rats. Hormones and Behaviour 18: 177190CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Jonge, F H and vande Poll, Ν E 1984 Relationships between sexual and aggressive behaviour in male and female rats: effects of gonadal hormones. Progress in Brain Research 61: 283302CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drews, D R and Wulczyn, F H 1975 Measuring dominance in rats. Psychology Recordings 25: 573581CrossRefGoogle Scholar
File, S E 1982 Colony aggression: effects of benzodiazepines on intruder behaviour. Physiological Psychology 10: 413416CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flannelly, K J and Lore, R 1975 Dominance-subordinance in cohabiting pairs of adult rats: effects on aggressive behaviour. Aggressive Behaviour 1: 3313403.0.CO;2-8>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flannelly, K J and Lore, R 1977 The influence of females upon aggression in domesticated male rats (Rattus rattus). Animal Behaviour 25: 654659CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flannelly, K J and Thor, D Η 1976 Territorial behaviour of laboratory rats under conditions of peripheral anosmia. Animal Learning and Behaviour 4: 337340CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fokkema, D S and Koolhaas, J M 1985 Acute and conditioned blood pressure changes in relation to social and psychosocial stimuli in rats. Physiology and Behavior 34: 3338CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fokkema, D S, Koolhaas, J K, van der Meulen, J and Schoemaker, R 1986 Social stress induced pressure breathing and consequent blood pressure oscillation. Life Sciences 38: 569575CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fokkema, D S, Smit, Κ, van der Gugten, J and Koolhaas, J M 1988 A coherent pattern among social behaviour, blood pressure, corticosterone and catecholamine measures in individual male rats. Physiology and Behavior 42: 485489CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fokkema, D S, Koolhaas, J M and van der Gugten, J 1995 Individual characteristics of behaviour, blood pressure, and adrenal hormones in colony rats. Physiology and Behavior 57: 857862CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
García-Brull, P D, Núñez, J and Núflez, A 1993 The effect of scents on the territorial and aggressive behaviour of laboratory rats. Behavioural Proceedings 29: 2536CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grant, E C 1963 An analysis of the social behaviour of the male laboratory rat. Behaviour 21: 260281CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, E C and Mackintosh, J H 1963 A comparison of the social postures of some common laboratory rodents. Behaviour 21: 246259Google Scholar
Hare, R 1999 The effects of changing group membership and intrusion on the behaviour and physiology of caged laboratory rats (Rattus norvegicusj. Consequences for welfare. MPhil Thesis, University of Nottingham, UKGoogle Scholar
Hurst, J L, Barnard, C J, Hare, R, Wheeldon, E B and West, C B 1996 Housing and welfare in laboratory rats: time-budgeting and pathophysiology in single-sex groups. Animal Behaviour 52: 335360CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurst, J L, Barnard, C J, Nevison, C M and West, C D 1998 Housing and welfare in laboratory rats: the welfare implications of social isolation and social contact among females. Animal Welfare 7: 121136CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koolhaas, J M, Schuurman, T and Wiepkema, P R 1980 The organization of intraspecific agonistic behaviour in the rat. Progress in Neurobiology 15: 247268CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Koolhaas, J M, Fokkema, D S, Bohus, B and van Oortmerssen, GA 1986 Individual differences in blood pressure reactivity and behaviour of male rats. In: Schmidt, T H, Dembronski, T M and Blümchen, G (eds) Biological and Psychological Factors in Cardiovascular Disease pp 517529. Springer-Verlag: Heidelberg, GermanyCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lore, R, Flannelly, K and Farina, P 1976 Ultrasounds produced by rats accompany decreases in intraspecific fighting. Aggressive Behaviour 2: 1751813.0.CO;2-7>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lore, R and Flannelly, K 1977 Rat societies. Scientific American 236: 106116CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Luciano, D and Lore, R 1975 Aggression and social experience in domesticated rats. Journal of Comparative Physiological Psychology 88: 917923CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, P J and Redfern, P H 1992 Acute and chronic antidepressant drug treatments induce opposite effects in the social behaviour of rats. Journal of Psychopharmacology 6: 241257CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nikoletseas, M and Lore, R 1981 Aggression in domesticated rats reared in a burrow-digging environment. Aggressive Behaviour 7: 2452523.0.CO;2-D>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norusis, M J 1992 SPSS for Windows: Professional Statistics Release 5. SPSS Inc: Chicago, USAGoogle Scholar
Olivier, B 1977 The ventromedial hypothalamus and aggressive behaviour in rats. Aggressive Behaviour 3: 47563.0.CO;2-H>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olivier, B, Olivier-Aardema, R and Wiepkema, P R 1983 Effect of anterior hypothalamic and mammillary area lesions on territorial aggressive behaviour in male rats. Behavioural Brain Research 9: 5981CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Poll, N E van de, de Jonge, F, Oyen, H G van and Pelt, J van 1982 Aggressive behaviour in rats: effects of winning or losing on subsequent aggressive interactions. Behavioural Proceedings 7: 143155CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schuurman, T 1980 Hormonal correlates of agonistic behaviour in adult male rats. Progress in Brain Research 53: 415420CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Takahashi, L K, Grossfeld, S and Lore, R K 1980 Attack and escape in the laboratory rat: a modification of the colony-intruder procedure. Behavioral and Neural Biology 29: 512517CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takahashi, L K and Lore, R K 1983 Intermale aggression of subordinate resident Long-Evans rats. Behavioural Proceedings 8: 2132CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wolfensohn, S and Lloyd, M 1994 Handbook of Laboratory Animal Management and Welfare. Oxford University Press: Oxford, UKGoogle Scholar