Schultz L A, Lore R K
Department of Psychology, Rutgers-The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick 08903.
J Comp Psychol. 1993 Jun;107(2):216-22. doi: 10.1037/0735-7036.107.2.216.
We compared the reproductive success and maternal behavior of sibling pairs of female Long-Evans rats (Rattus norvegicus) housed together from birth (familiar) to that of pairs of unrelated females housed apart during development (unfamiliar). Sires either remained in the colonies through weaning of their pups or were removed before parturition. Familiar animals reared more pups to weaning, were more likely to share in caring for their pups, and were less likely to exhibit infanticide than were unfamiliar ones. The presence of males in cages with pups had no direct effect on the reproductive success of females, but female pairs housed with males spent less time than female pairs housed alone caring for pups together in a combined nest. Conflicting evidence for communal rearing in populations of wild rats may reflect differences in the genetic relatedness or early social experience of female rats.
我们比较了从出生起就饲养在一起的雌性长 Evans 大鼠(褐家鼠)同胞对(熟悉组)与在发育过程中分开饲养的无亲缘关系雌性对(陌生组)的繁殖成功率和母性行为。父本要么在其幼崽断奶前一直留在群落中,要么在分娩前被移走。与陌生组相比,熟悉组的动物将更多幼崽抚养至断奶,更有可能共同照顾幼崽,且表现出杀婴行为的可能性更小。笼子里有雄性与幼崽对雌性的繁殖成功率没有直接影响,但与单独饲养的雌性对相比,与雄性一起饲养的雌性对在组合巢穴中共同照顾幼崽的时间更少。野生大鼠种群中关于共同养育的相互矛盾的证据可能反映了雌性大鼠在遗传亲缘关系或早期社会经验方面的差异。