Behavioral thermoregulatory responses of single- and group-housed mice
GORDON, C. J., P. BECKER AND J. S. ALI. Behavioral thermoregulatory responses of single- and group-housed mice. PHYSIOL BEHAV 65(2) 255–262, 1998.−The ambient temperature (T a) to house and study laboratory rodents is critical for nearly all biomedical studies. The ideal T a for housing rodents and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiology & behavior 1998-11, Vol.65 (2), p.255-262 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | GORDON, C. J., P. BECKER AND J. S. ALI. Behavioral thermoregulatory responses of single- and group-housed mice. PHYSIOL BEHAV
65(2) 255–262, 1998.−The ambient temperature (T
a) to house and study laboratory rodents is critical for nearly all biomedical studies. The ideal T
a for housing rodents and other animals should be based on their thermoregulatory requirements. However, fundamental information on the behavioral thermoregulatory responses of single- and group-housed rodents is meager. To address this issue, thermoregulatory behavior was assessed in individual and groups of CD-1 mice housed in a temperature gradient. Mice were housed in groups of five or individually while selected T
a and motor activity were monitored. Single- and group-housed mice displayed a circadian oscillation of selected T
a and motor activity with relatively warm T
as of ∼29°C selected during the light phase; during the dark phase selected T
a was reduced by 4°C, whereas motor activity increased. Selected T
a of aged (11 months old) mice housed individually was ∼1.0°C warmer than the group-housed mice. Thermal preference of younger mice (2 months old) was similar for single- and group-housed animals. The operative T
a of mice housed in standard facilities was estimated by measuring the cooling rate of “phantom” mice modeled from aluminum cylinders. The results show that the typical housing conditions for single- and group-housed mice are cooler than their T
a for ideal thermal comfort. |
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ISSN: | 0031-9384 1873-507X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0031-9384(98)00148-6 |