A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.

Rats (Rattus norvegicus) bred for research are typically confined with their litters until weaning, but will spend time away from pups when given the opportunity. We aimed to assess how dam welfare is affected by the ability to escape from their pups. Rat dams (n = 16) were housed in cages either wi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anna S Ratuski, Daniel M Weary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253020
id doaj-50cb97cd091b4dc7970a43a8f7bf5a73
record_format Article
spelling doaj-50cb97cd091b4dc7970a43a8f7bf5a732021-06-19T05:30:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01166e025302010.1371/journal.pone.0253020A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.Anna S RatuskiDaniel M WearyRats (Rattus norvegicus) bred for research are typically confined with their litters until weaning, but will spend time away from pups when given the opportunity. We aimed to assess how dam welfare is affected by the ability to escape from their pups. Rat dams (n = 16) were housed in cages either with or without an elevated loft. We measured time dams spent in lofts, time spent nursing, and affective states using elevated plus maze and anticipatory behavior testing. We predicted that 1) dams housed with lofts would use them increasingly as pups aged, 2) dams without a loft would spend more time passively nursing (i.e. initiated by pups rather than the dam) and more total time nursing as pups aged, and 3) dams housed with lofts would show evidence of a more positive affective state. Dams housed with lofts spent more time in the loft with increasing pup age; dams spent on average (mean ± SE) 27 ± 5% of their time in the loft when pups were 1 wk old, increasing to 52 ± 5% of their time at 3 wks. When pups were 3 wks old, dams with lofts spent less time passively nursing (10 ± 2% of total time, compared to 27 ± 4% for dams without a loft) and less time nursing overall (36 ± 4% of time versus 59 ± 2% for dams without a loft). Rats without loft access showed increased anticipatory behavior potentially indicative of negative affective state (24.5±1.8 behaviors per minute in wk 3 compared to 18.8±1.0 in wk 1). These findings indicate that rat dams in laboratories choose to spend time away from their pups when provided the opportunity, particularly later in lactation; an inability to do so is associated with increased passive nursing and negative affect.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253020
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna S Ratuski
Daniel M Weary
spellingShingle Anna S Ratuski
Daniel M Weary
A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anna S Ratuski
Daniel M Weary
author_sort Anna S Ratuski
title A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
title_short A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
title_full A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
title_fullStr A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
title_full_unstemmed A break from the pups: The effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
title_sort break from the pups: the effects of loft access on the welfare of lactating laboratory rats.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Rats (Rattus norvegicus) bred for research are typically confined with their litters until weaning, but will spend time away from pups when given the opportunity. We aimed to assess how dam welfare is affected by the ability to escape from their pups. Rat dams (n = 16) were housed in cages either with or without an elevated loft. We measured time dams spent in lofts, time spent nursing, and affective states using elevated plus maze and anticipatory behavior testing. We predicted that 1) dams housed with lofts would use them increasingly as pups aged, 2) dams without a loft would spend more time passively nursing (i.e. initiated by pups rather than the dam) and more total time nursing as pups aged, and 3) dams housed with lofts would show evidence of a more positive affective state. Dams housed with lofts spent more time in the loft with increasing pup age; dams spent on average (mean ± SE) 27 ± 5% of their time in the loft when pups were 1 wk old, increasing to 52 ± 5% of their time at 3 wks. When pups were 3 wks old, dams with lofts spent less time passively nursing (10 ± 2% of total time, compared to 27 ± 4% for dams without a loft) and less time nursing overall (36 ± 4% of time versus 59 ± 2% for dams without a loft). Rats without loft access showed increased anticipatory behavior potentially indicative of negative affective state (24.5±1.8 behaviors per minute in wk 3 compared to 18.8±1.0 in wk 1). These findings indicate that rat dams in laboratories choose to spend time away from their pups when provided the opportunity, particularly later in lactation; an inability to do so is associated with increased passive nursing and negative affect.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253020
work_keys_str_mv AT annasratuski abreakfromthepupstheeffectsofloftaccessonthewelfareoflactatinglaboratoryrats
AT danielmweary abreakfromthepupstheeffectsofloftaccessonthewelfareoflactatinglaboratoryrats
AT annasratuski breakfromthepupstheeffectsofloftaccessonthewelfareoflactatinglaboratoryrats
AT danielmweary breakfromthepupstheeffectsofloftaccessonthewelfareoflactatinglaboratoryrats
_version_ 1721371235715121152