Oregon National Primate Research Center, Division of Animal Resources and Research Support, Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, Oregon, USA.
Emory National Primate Research Center Field Station, Division of Animal Resources, Emory University, Lawrenceville, Georgia, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2023 Nov;85(11):e23554. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23554. Epub 2023 Sep 29.
Demand for nonhuman primates in research has increased over the past several years, while nonhuman primate supply remains a challenge in the United States. Global nonhuman primate supply issues make it increasingly important to maximize domestic colony production. To explore how housing conditions across primate breeding colonies impact infant survival and animal production more broadly, we collected medical records from 7959 rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) and 492 pigtail macaques (Macaca nemestrina) across seven breeding facilities and used generalized mixed-effect modeling to determine prenatal and infant survival odds by housing type and group size. Infant survival odds for each housing type and group size varied for prenatal, neonatal, early infant, and late infant age groups. Odds of prenatal survival were lowest in paired indoor housing and small and medium outdoor groups. No housing type performed better than large outdoor groups for neonatal survival. Odds of early infant survival was greatest in indoor and mixed indoor/outdoor housing compared to large outdoor enclosures. Large outdoor housing was associated with higher survival odds for late infant survival compared to small and medium outdoor housing. These results may influence housing choices at macaque breeding facilities hoping to maximize infant success, although there are relative care costs, the promotion of species-typical behaviors, and infrastructure factors to also consider. Our study used an interinstitutional collaboration that allowed for the analysis of more infant macaque medical records than ever before and used the broad variations across the seven national primate research centers to make the results applicable to many other facilities housing macaques.
近年来,研究对非人类灵长类动物的需求不断增加,而美国的非人类灵长类动物供应仍然是一个挑战。全球非人类灵长类动物供应问题使得最大限度地增加国内群体生产变得越来越重要。为了探索灵长类动物繁殖群体的住房条件如何更广泛地影响婴儿的存活率和动物的生产,我们从七个繁殖设施中收集了 7959 只恒河猴(Macaca mulatta)和 492 只猪尾猴(Macaca nemestrina)的医疗记录,并使用广义混合效应模型来确定住房类型和群体规模对产前和婴儿存活率的影响。每种住房类型和群体规模的婴儿存活率因产前、新生儿、早期婴儿和晚期婴儿年龄组而有所不同。产前存活率最低的是配对室内住房和小、中户外群体。没有任何住房类型在新生儿存活率方面优于大户外群体。与大户外围场相比,室内和混合室内/户外住房的早期婴儿存活率最高。大户外住房与小、中户外住房相比,晚期婴儿存活率的存活几率更高。这些结果可能会影响灵长类动物繁殖设施的住房选择,希望最大限度地提高婴儿的成功率,尽管还有相对的护理成本、促进物种典型行为以及基础设施因素需要考虑。我们的研究利用了机构间的合作,使得能够分析比以往任何时候都多的婴儿猕猴医疗记录,并利用七个国家灵长类动物研究中心的广泛差异,使结果适用于许多其他饲养猕猴的设施。