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1.
Animals (Basel) ; 12(19)2022 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36230257

ABSTRACT

Accelerometers are a technology that is increasingly used in the evaluation of animal behaviour. A tri-axial accelerometer attached to a vest was used on Tamandua tetradactyla individuals (n = 10) at Biodiversity Park. First, the influence of using a vest on the animals' behaviour was evaluated (ABA-type: A1 and A2, without a vest; B, with a vest; each stage lasted 24 h), and no changes were detected. Second, their behaviour was monitored using videos and the accelerometer simultaneously (experimental room, 20 min). The observed behaviours were correlated with the accelerometer data, and summary measures (X, Y and Z axes) were obtained. Additionally, the overall dynamic body acceleration was calculated, determining a threshold to discriminate activity/inactivity events (variance = 0.0055). Then, based on a 24 h complementary test (video sampling every 5 min), the sensitivity (85.91%) and precision (100%) of the accelerometer were assessed. Animals were exposed to an ABA-type experimental design: A1 and A2: complex enclosure; B: decreased complexity (each stage lasted 24 h). An increase in total activity (%) was revealed using the accelerometer (26.15 ± 1.50, 29.29 ± 2.25, and 35.36 ± 3.15, respectively). Similar activity levels were detected using video analysis. The results demonstrate that the use of the accelerometer is reliable to determine the activity. Considering that the zoo-housed lesser anteaters exhibit a cathemeral activity pattern, this study contributes to easily monitoring their activities and responses to different management procedures supporting welfare programs, as well as ex situ conservation.

2.
Animals (Basel) ; 12(1)2021 Dec 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35011182

ABSTRACT

Management procedures affect behavioural and physiological stress responses of wild mammals under human care. According to the Reactive Scope Model, normal values are presumed to exist within predictive and reactive ranges. First, stress parameters of zoo-housed adult Tamandua tetradactyla were evaluated in winter and summer (29 days each), determining the level of behaviour and/or physiological parameters needed to respond to predictable environmental changes. Secondly, the effects of veterinary procedures and transportation were studied in both seasons. Non-invasive methods were applied, assessing behaviour through videos and adrenocortical activity by faecal glucocorticoid metabolites (FGMs). Lesser anteaters exhibited seasonality (summer > winter) in some behavioural parameters, such as nocturnal activities, as well as in the activity cycle (e.g., acrophase) and FGMs. A veterinary check elicited an increase in total activity (TA), natural behaviours and repetitive locomotion and affected the activity cycle, particularly in summer. Transport produced changes in TA, nocturnal and natural activity and some variables of the activity cycle, mostly during summer. Although the effects of routine management procedures were different from each other and presumably stressful, they elicited changes only at the behavioural level, which was greater during summer. The differences observed according to non-invasive methodologies highlight the importance of a multidisciplinary approach in this context and suggest that it is unlikely that individual welfare was affected.

3.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 280: 91-96, 2019 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31002827

ABSTRACT

Faecal glucocorticoid measurement is a potentially important tool for improving wildlife conservation, but its use is still limited by methodological issues including the need to avoid modifications of steroids by faecal microorganisms during storage. The freezing of faeces is recommended as a means of avoiding such alterations, but this is costly under non-controlled environmental conditions. The present study was designed to determine whether the application of thymol reduced the proliferation of microorganisms in the faeces of Tamandua tetradactyla and whether it influenced faecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) measurements. Tamandua tetradactyla faeces were individually collected after defaecation, divided into fractions (5.5 g each) and kept in sealed glass Petri dishes at 22 ±â€¯2 °C. A thymol solution (550 µL; 5 mg g-1 feces; 80% ethanol) or an 80% ethanol solution (550 µL, control) was added before storage of faeces. Negative controls for FGM consisted of samples without thymol or ethanol solutions. All samples were evaluated at 0, 24, 48 and 72 h post-defaecation. Thymol was first incubated with a glucocorticoid standard in a faeces-free tube or in a faecal sample in order to determine whether it interfered with FGM measurements. Data showed that thymol did not affect FGM measurements. Post-defaecation time caused a significant reduction in FGM measurements in the negative control, an increment at 48 h in the control, and no change in FGM measurements in thymol treatment. FGM measurements were significantly different between groups (negative control > control - treatment). Thymol caused a significant reduction of up to three orders of magnitude in total coliforms, total aerobic and anaerobic heterotrophic mesophilic bacteria, mold and yeast per gram of faeces at 24, 48 and 72 h. The reduction in microbial activity presumably contributed to the stability of FGM over time. Spore-forming bacteria (SFB) in faeces were not reduced by thymol. We propose thymol as an alternative to freezing since it stabilizes FGMs for at least 3 days after collection in the faeces of Tamandua tetradactyla.


Subject(s)
Feces/microbiology , Glucocorticoids/metabolism , Metabolome/drug effects , Thymol/pharmacology , Xenarthra/metabolism , Animals , Colony Count, Microbial , Enterobacteriaceae/drug effects , Etiocholanolone/analogs & derivatives , Etiocholanolone/metabolism , Female , Male , Reference Standards
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