Chojnacki Rachel M, Vas Judit, Andersen Inger Lise
Department of Animal and Aquacultural Sciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås, Norway.
PLoS One. 2014 Apr 7;9(4):e94253. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0094253. eCollection 2014.
Prenatal stress (stress experienced by a pregnant mother) and its effects on offspring have been comprehensively studied but relatively little research has been done on how prenatal social stress affects farm animals such as goats. Here, we use the operational description of 'stress' as "physical or perceived threats to homeostasis." The aim of this study was to investigate the prenatal effects of different herd densities on the fear responses and sociality of goat kids. Pregnant Norwegian dairy goats were exposed to high, medium or low prenatal animal density treatments throughout gestation (1.0, 2.0 or 3.0 m2 per animal, respectively). One kid per litter was subjected to two behavioral tests at 5 weeks of age. The 'social test' was applied to assess the fear responses, sociality and social recognition skills when presented with a familiar and unfamiliar kid and the 'separation test' assessed the behavioral coping skills when isolated. The results indicate goat kids from the highest prenatal density of 1.0 m2 were more fearful than the kids from the lower prenatal densities (i.e. made more escape attempts (separation test: P < 0.001) and vocalizations (social test: P < 0.001; separation test: P < 0.001). This effect was more pronounced in females than males in the high density (vocalizations; social test: P < 0.001; separation test: P = 0.001) and females were generally more social than males. However, goat kids did not differentiate between a familiar and an unfamiliar kid at 5 weeks of age and sociality was not affected by the prenatal density treatment. We conclude that high animal densities during pregnancy in goats produce offspring that have a higher level of fear, particularly in females. Behavioral changes in offspring that occur as an effect of prenatal stress are of high importance as many of the females are recruited to the breeding stock of dairy goats.
产前应激(即怀孕母亲所经历的应激)及其对后代的影响已得到全面研究,但关于产前社会应激如何影响山羊等农场动物的研究相对较少。在此,我们将“应激”的操作性描述定义为“对体内平衡的生理或感知到的威胁”。本研究的目的是调查不同畜群密度对山羊幼崽恐惧反应和社交性的产前影响。怀孕的挪威奶山羊在整个妊娠期分别接受高、中、低三种产前动物密度处理(每只动物分别为1.0、2.0或3.0平方米)。每窝选一只幼崽在5周龄时进行两项行为测试。“社交测试”用于评估当面对熟悉和不熟悉的幼崽时的恐惧反应、社交性和社交识别技能,“分离测试”则评估隔离时的行为应对技能。结果表明,产前密度最高为1.0平方米的山羊幼崽比产前密度较低的幼崽更恐惧(即逃跑尝试更多(分离测试:P < 0.001)以及发声更多(社交测试:P < 0.001;分离测试:P < 0.001)。在高密度组中,这种影响在雌性中比在雄性中更明显(发声;社交测试:P < 0.001;分离测试:P = 0.001),并且雌性总体上比雄性更具社交性。然而,山羊幼崽在5周龄时无法区分熟悉和不熟悉的幼崽,社交性也不受产前密度处理的影响。我们得出结论:山羊孕期的高动物密度会使后代产生更高水平的恐惧,尤其是雌性。由于许多雌性会被选入奶山羊繁殖种群,产前应激导致的后代行为变化具有高度重要性。