Effects of isolation and grouping on guinea pigs

Guinea pigs spent 80 days in isolation or same-sex groups beginning either immediately after weaning or in adulthood. Isolated animals were more active in a cross maze, but not in an open field. No group of animals preferred a goal guinea pig in a four-choice test. Males isolated at weaning meeting...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral biology 1973-10, Vol.9 (4), p.493-497
Hauptverfasser: Hull, Elaine M., Rosselli, Linda, Langan, Charles J.
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container_title Behavioral biology
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creator Hull, Elaine M.
Rosselli, Linda
Langan, Charles J.
description Guinea pigs spent 80 days in isolation or same-sex groups beginning either immediately after weaning or in adulthood. Isolated animals were more active in a cross maze, but not in an open field. No group of animals preferred a goal guinea pig in a four-choice test. Males isolated at weaning meeting another such male were more aggressive than males in isolated-grouped or grouped-grouped encounters, but did not make more nonaggressive contacts. Males isolated in adulthood meeting other such males exhibited more nonaggressive behavior, but not more fighting. Use of “gregariousness” as a unitary concept is questioned.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0091-6773(73)80068-9
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subjects Adrenal Glands - anatomy & histology
Age Factors
Aggression
Animals
Body Weight
Crowding
Exploratory Behavior
Female
Guinea Pigs - growth & development
Humans
Locomotion
Male
Organ Size
Sex Factors
Sexual Behavior, Animal
Social Behavior
Social Isolation
Stress, Psychological
Testis - anatomy & histology
title Effects of isolation and grouping on guinea pigs
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