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  3. Effects of Cage Enrichment on Behavior, Welfare and Outcome Variability in Female Mice
 

Effects of Cage Enrichment on Behavior, Welfare and Outcome Variability in Female Mice

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.125705
Date of Publication
October 26, 2018
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Tierpath...

VPH-Institut, Abteilu...

Contributor
Bailoo, Jeremy Davidson
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Murphy, Eimear Mary
Boada Saña, Maria
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Varholick, Justin Adam
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Hintze, Sara Anna Elisabet
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Baussière, Caroline
Hahn, Kerstin Caroline
Institut für Tierpathologie (ITPA)
Göpfert, Christine
Institut für Tierpathologie (ITPA)
Palme, Rupert
Völkl, Bernhard
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Würbel, Hannoorcid-logo
VPH-Institut, Abteilung Tierschutz
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::630...

500 - Science::590 - ...

Series
Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1662-5153
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00232
PubMed ID
30416435
Description
The manner in which laboratory rodents are housed is driven by economics (minimal use of space and resources), ergonomics (ease of handling and visibility of animals), hygiene, and standardization (reduction of variation). This has resulted in housing conditions that lack sensory and motor stimulation and restrict the expression of species-typical behavior. In mice, such housing conditions have been associated with indicators of impaired welfare, including abnormal repetitive behavior (stereotypies, compulsive behavior), enhanced anxiety and stress reactivity, and thermal stress. However, due to concerns that more complex environmental conditions might increase variation in experimental results, there has been considerable resistance to the implementation of environmental enrichment beyond the provision of nesting material. Here, using 96 C57BL/6 and SWISS female mice, respectively, we systematically varied environmental enrichment across four levels spanning the range of common enrichment strategies: (1) bedding alone; (2) bedding + nesting material; (3) deeper bedding + nesting material + shelter + increased vertical space; and (4) semi-naturalistic conditions, including weekly changes of enrichment items. We studied how these different forms of environmental enrichment affected measures of animal welfare, including home-cage behavior (time–budget and stereotypic behavior), anxiety (open field behavior, elevated plus-maze behavior), growth (food and water intake, body mass), stress physiology (glucocorticoid metabolites in fecal boluses and adrenal mass), brain function (recurrent perseveration in a two-choice guessing task) and emotional valence (judgment bias). Our results highlight the difficulty in making general recommendations across common strains of mice and for selecting enrichment strategies within specific strains. Overall, the greatest benefit was observed in animals housed with the greatest degree of enrichment. Thus, in the super-enriched housing condition, stereotypic behavior, behavioral measures of anxiety, growth and stress physiology varied in a manner consistent with improved animal welfare compared to the other housing conditions with less enrichment. Similar to other studies, we found no evidence, in the measures assessed here, that environmental enrichment increased variation in experimental results.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/63652
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fnbeh-12-00232.pdftextAdobe PDF3.44 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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