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Operant task performance and corticosterone concentrations in rats housed directly on bedding and on wire (2008)

Freed, C., Martinez, V., Sarter, M. et al.

Abstract

Contrary to assumptions, housing did not affect task performance. Baseline corticosterone concentrations were similar for the 2 experimental groups, but corticosterone concentrations were significantly higher for the wire-bottom group than the solid-bottom group immediately after the restraint and remained elevated 2 d later. Corticosterone levels decreased in both groups after exposure to continuous light. Overall, the data indicate that subtle but significant differences occur in responses of rats housed on wire-bottom versus solid-bottom caging when the animals are exposed to acute restraint.

Published
2008

Animal Type
Rat, Rodent
Topics No terms assigned.

Citation
Freed, C., Martinez, V., Sarter, M. et al. 2008. Operant task performance and corticosterone concentrations in rats housed directly on bedding and on wire . Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science [Contemporary Topics in Laboratory Animal Science] 47(5), 18-22.

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