Purdue University Department of Comparative Pathobiology, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
Charles River, Wilmington, Massachusetts, USA.
Lab Anim (NY). 2017 Mar 22;46(4):176-184. doi: 10.1038/laban.1225.
Aggression is a major welfare issue in mice, particularly when mice unfamiliar to each other are first placed in cages, as happens on receipt from a vendor, and following cage cleaning. Injuries from aggression are the second leading cause of unplanned euthanasia in mice, following ulcerative dermatitis. Commonly employed strategies for reducing aggression-related injury are largely anecdotal, and may even be counterproductive. Here we report a series of experiments testing potential explanations and interventions for post-shipping aggression-related injuries in C57BL/6 mice. First, we examined the effects of weaning: testing whether manipulating weaning age reduced aggression-related injuries, and if repeated mixing of weaned mice before shipping increased these injuries. Contrary to our predictions, repeated mixing did not increase post-shipping injurious aggression, and early weaning reduced aggression-related injuries. Second, we examined potential post-shipping interventions: testing whether lavender essential oil applied to the cage reduced aggression-related injuries, and whether a variety of enrichments decreased injurious aggression. Again, contrary to predictions, lavender increased wounding, and none of the enrichments reduced it. However, consistent with the effects of weaning age in the first experiment, cages with higher mean body weight showed elevated levels of aggression-related wounding. Finally, we tested whether C57BL/6 substrains and identification methods affected levels of intra-cage wounding from aggression. We found no effect of strain, but cages where mice were ear-notched for identification showed higher levels of wounding than cages where mice were tail-tattooed. Overall, these results emphasize the multifactorial nature of home-cage injurious aggression, and the importance of testing received wisdom when it comes to managing complex behavioral and welfare problems. In terms of practical recommendations to reduce aggressive wounding in the home cage, tail tattooing is recommended over ear notching and late weaning should be avoided.
攻击性是小鼠的一个主要福利问题,尤其是当彼此不熟悉的小鼠首次被放置在笼子里时,例如从供应商那里收到货物后,以及在笼子清洁后。攻击性导致的伤害是仅次于溃疡性皮炎的导致小鼠计划外安乐死的第二大原因。减少攻击性相关伤害的常用策略在很大程度上是传闻,甚至可能适得其反。在这里,我们报告了一系列实验,这些实验测试了减少 C57BL/6 小鼠运输后攻击性相关伤害的潜在解释和干预措施。首先,我们研究了断奶的影响:测试改变断奶年龄是否会减少攻击性相关的伤害,以及在运输前是否重复混合断奶的小鼠是否会增加这些伤害。与我们的预测相反,重复混合并没有增加运输后的攻击性伤害,而早期断奶减少了攻击性相关的伤害。其次,我们研究了潜在的运输后干预措施:测试在笼子里应用薰衣草精油是否会减少攻击性相关的伤害,以及各种丰富物是否会减少攻击性伤害。同样与预测相反,薰衣草增加了伤口,而没有一种丰富物减少了伤口。然而,与第一个实验中断奶年龄的影响一致,平均体重较高的笼子显示出更高水平的攻击性相关伤口。最后,我们测试了 C57BL/6 亚系和识别方法是否会影响笼子内的攻击性伤口水平。我们没有发现品系的影响,但用于识别的小鼠耳朵划痕的笼子比用于识别的小鼠尾巴纹身的笼子的伤口水平更高。总的来说,这些结果强调了家庭笼养攻击性伤害的多因素性质,以及在处理复杂的行为和福利问题时,对传统智慧进行测试的重要性。就减少家庭笼养中攻击性伤口的实际建议而言,尾巴纹身优于耳朵划痕,应避免晚断奶。