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Post-weaning living with parents during juvenile period alters locomotor activity, social and parental behaviors in mandarin voles

•Living with parents during puberty reduces locomotor activity.•Post-weaning living with parents reduces contact interaction and sniffing.•Post-weaning living with parents increases the levels of parental care. Neonatal parental care plays an important role in the development of offspring behavior,...

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Published in:Behavioural processes 2013-09, Vol.98, p.78-84
Main Authors: Wu, Ruiyong, Song, Zhenzhen, Tai, Fadao, Wang, Lu, Kong, Lingzhe, Wang, Jianli
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creator Wu, Ruiyong
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description •Living with parents during puberty reduces locomotor activity.•Post-weaning living with parents reduces contact interaction and sniffing.•Post-weaning living with parents increases the levels of parental care. Neonatal parental care plays an important role in the development of offspring behavior, but little is known about the effect of post-weaning contact between offspring and parents on locomotory, social and parental behavior. Here, we explore this concept using socially monogamous mandarin voles (Microtus mandarinus). Voles were assigned to live with parents and siblings from the same litter until 45d (natural dispersal time in the field) or to live with siblings from the same litter after weaning at 21d (normally weaned time, the control). At 70d of age, behaviors were recorded in open field and social interaction tests, and parental care toward their own offspring was measured. Results show that voles that live with parents post-weaning engaged in less locomotory activity and rearing behavior in the open field test, less sniffing of novel individuals and displayed more parental care, compared to voles that did not continue to live with their parents. These findings demonstrate that parent–offspring interaction post-weaning alters locomotory activity, social behavior and parental behavior of offspring at adulthood.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.beproc.2013.05.008
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Neonatal parental care plays an important role in the development of offspring behavior, but little is known about the effect of post-weaning contact between offspring and parents on locomotory, social and parental behavior. Here, we explore this concept using socially monogamous mandarin voles (Microtus mandarinus). Voles were assigned to live with parents and siblings from the same litter until 45d (natural dispersal time in the field) or to live with siblings from the same litter after weaning at 21d (normally weaned time, the control). At 70d of age, behaviors were recorded in open field and social interaction tests, and parental care toward their own offspring was measured. Results show that voles that live with parents post-weaning engaged in less locomotory activity and rearing behavior in the open field test, less sniffing of novel individuals and displayed more parental care, compared to voles that did not continue to live with their parents. 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Psychology</subject><subject>General aspects</subject><subject>juveniles</subject><subject>Lasiopodomys mandarinus</subject><subject>locomotion</subject><subject>Male</subject><subject>Maternal Behavior</subject><subject>Microtus mandarinus</subject><subject>monogamy</subject><subject>Motor Activity</subject><subject>Parental behavior</subject><subject>parents</subject><subject>Parent–offspring interaction</subject><subject>Paternal Behavior</subject><subject>Post-weaning</subject><subject>progeny</subject><subject>Psychology. Psychoanalysis. 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ispartof Behavioural processes, 2013-09, Vol.98, p.78-84
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source ScienceDirect Journals
subjects adulthood
Animal ethology
Animals
Arvicolinae - physiology
Arvicolinae - psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Female
field experimentation
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
juveniles
Lasiopodomys mandarinus
locomotion
Male
Maternal Behavior
Microtus mandarinus
monogamy
Motor Activity
Parental behavior
parents
Parent–offspring interaction
Paternal Behavior
Post-weaning
progeny
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
rearing
siblings
Social Behavior
voles
Weaning
title Post-weaning living with parents during juvenile period alters locomotor activity, social and parental behaviors in mandarin voles
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