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1.
Behav Processes ; 70(2): 182-5, 2005 Sep 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16129240

ABSTRACT

It is known that rats tend to eat a smaller/lighter piece of food at the food source but carry a larger/heavier one to the nest for consumption. This could be interpreted well in terms of the trade-off or motivational conflict between "feeding" and "risk avoidance", because eating food immediately satisfies feeding motivation while carrying food has an advantage to avoid predatory risk by keeping time spent outside the nest shorter. In the present study, influences of incentive factors of feeding motivation on food-carrying behavior were evaluated using three different kinds of food that were identical in weight. There was no significant difference in food-carrying tendency among the three kinds of food, though a significant preference was indicated among the food. The results suggest that food-carrying behavior is not influenced by food types.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning , Feeding Behavior , Animals , Male , Motivation , Predatory Behavior , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Weight-Bearing
2.
Behav Genet ; 35(3): 323-32, 2005 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15864447

ABSTRACT

The present paper evaluates the inclusion of a standard strain or outbred stock in multi-strain behavioral phenotyping protocols to perform the same role as the external standard in biochemical assay procedures. As potential standards, the F344 inbred strain and an outbred stock of Long Evans were tested with three other inbred strains. To evaluate the influence of rearing conditions on phenotype stability, one group of F344s was born at the University of Tsukuba, another, bred elsewhere and delivered to Tsukuba at 4 weeks of age. All animals were tested in open-field (OF), runway emergence (RE) and digging tests as adults. The results showed no influence of breeding or transportation history on OF and RE behavior of the two F344 groups, while there was evidence that digging behavior may be affected by the different rearing experience. The inclusion of a 'standard strain or stock' in phenotyping protocols involving multiple inbred strains or lines of rats, mice and flies has obvious advantages by providing a reference point for inter-laboratory comparisons. The properties of inbred strains and outbred stocks favorable to their use as standards are discussed.


Subject(s)
Genetics, Behavioral/methods , Motor Activity/genetics , Rats, Inbred F344/genetics , Rats, Long-Evans/genetics , Animals , Calibration , Crosses, Genetic , Defecation/physiology , Observer Variation , Phenotype , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Reaction Time , Species Specificity
3.
Physiol Behav ; 84(1): 141-5, 2005 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15642617

ABSTRACT

Food-carrying behavior in foraging rats has been assumed to have an advantage to avoid risks by shortening time spent outside their nests. However, there is no experimental evidence for this. In the present study, food-carrying behavior for four sizes of food pellets (45, 100, 200, and 1000 mg) was measured under the presentation of risk-approaching signal (shock-conditioned tone) to verify whether food-carrying behavior is related to risk avoidance or not. The results supported the hypothesis as a whole that food-carrying behavior has close relation to risk avoidance. Food-carrying behavior was increased by the signal for all food sizes, especially statistically significant in the 200 mg condition, while it decreased to the baseline at early stage of the test. These findings are discussed in relation to predatory risk.


Subject(s)
Appetitive Behavior/physiology , Conditioning, Psychological/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Electroshock/methods , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Risk
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