1 research outputs found
The effects of group versus single housing on home cage behaviour in two strains of laboratory mice
Studying the behavioural patterns of animals in their house may help to understand
their needs, but there has been a little investigation of home-cage behaviours in
commonly used inbred strains of mice such as C57BL/6 and DBA/2. Therefore, understanding
behavioural patterns in these mice is important for neuroscience research. For
the first time, this experiment was carried out to investigate the long-term effects of housing
conditions (single vs. group) on home cage behaviour of C57BL/6 and DBA/2 mice,
in order to reveal differences between C57BL/6 and DBA/2 in home-cage behaviours and
in response to single-housing. Sixty-four mice (32 mice/strain) were housed either singly
(SH) (n= 32) or in four groups, each group contained 8 animals. Home cage behavioural
patterns were recorded weekly using ethogram-based instantaneous sampling for 5 consecutive
weeks. Regardless of strain, single housed (SH) mice displayed higher levels of
grooming and bedding directed-behaviours and were more frequently seen in-the-crawl
ball, and had lower levels of feeding behaviour compared to their group housed (GH)
conspecifics. There were significant strain differences in anxiety-related behaviours with
the DBA/2 strain demonstrating higher levels of sleep, feeding and grooming behaviour
and frequent presence in-the-crawl ball, and lower levels of exploration, locomotion and
bedding-directed behaviour compared to the C57BL/6 strain. The results therefore suggest
that different housing systems influence home cage behaviours of laboratory mice
with the mice of the DBA/2 strain appearing more anxious. These findings may also have
great implications for researchers to decide the most appropriate phenotype to use in
measuring neural response–relevant behaviours in novel animal/human models