Social Housing & Companionship
Hamster enrichment and social housing (2024)
Providing our animals with the best welfare possible is one of our main goals as Animal Technicians. As we want to deliver the most appropriate care for our hamsters, we have undertaken some research projects of our own to ensure...
Year Published: 2024Topics: Environmental Enrichment, Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Hamster, Rodent
Citation: Devine, A., Boratyn, A. 2024. Hamster enrichment and social housing. Animal Technology and Welfare 23(3), 205–207.
Read MoreRabbit Behaviour, Health and Care
This book is an essential, thorough, very practical guide to understanding and caring for your rabbit. By following the advice in this book, both rabbit owners and veterinary health professionals report healthier and more content rabbits. Developed from the successful...
Year Published: 2015Topics: Housing, Husbandry & Management, Natural Behavior, Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Rabbit
Citation: Buseth, M. E., Saunders, R. 2015. Rabbit Behaviour, Health and Care. CABI, Wallingford, Oxfordshire. 225 p.
Read MoreA method to improve the housing of breeding rats used to produce pups for tissue (2025)
Rats are considered highly social animals. In the wild, they live in groups and develop complex social structures. Regrouping rats is considered stressful. We therefore wanted to keep animals in monogamous pairs so that they could develop a social bond...
Year Published: 2025Topics: Housing, Reproduction, Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Rat, Rodent
Citation: Booth, K., King, J., Stephen, J. et al. 2025. A method to improve the housing of breeding rats used to produce pups for tissue. Animal Technology and Welfare 24(1), 62–65.
Read MorePsychosocial stress, glucocorticoids, and structural alterations in the tree shrew hippocampus
Animal models for chronic stress represent an indispensable preclinical approach to human pathology since clinical data point to a major role of psychological stress experiences, acute and/or chronic, to the development of behavioral and physiological disturbances. Chronic emotional arousal is...
Year Published: 2001Topics: Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Tree Shrew
Citation: Fuchs, E., Flügge, G., Ohl, F. et al. 2001. Psychosocial stress, glucocorticoids, and structural alterations in the tree shrew hippocampus. Physiology & Behavior 73(3), 285–291.
Read MoreLong term impacts of early social environment on chimpanzee white matter
Early adverse rearing conditions are known to have deleterious consequences on social behavior, cognition, and brain development of both human and nonhuman primates. We analyzed archival diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data from mother- (MR) or nursery-reared (NR) chimpanzees and used...
Year Published: 2024Topics: Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Chimpanzee, Nonhuman Primate
Citation: Mulholland, M. M., Hecht, E., Wesley, M. J. et al. 2024. Long term impacts of early social environment on chimpanzee white matter. Scientific Reports 14(1), 29879.
Read MoreSocial stress in tree shrews: Effects on physiology, brain function, and behavior of subordinate individuals
Social stress is known to be involved in the etiology of central nervous disorders such as depression. In recent years, animal models have been developed that use chronic stress to induce neuroendocrine and central nervous changes that might be similar...
Year Published: 2002Topics: Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Tree Shrew
Citation: Fuchs, E., Flügge, G. 2002. Social stress in tree shrews: Effects on physiology, brain function, and behavior of subordinate individuals. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior 73(1), 247–258.
Read MoreThe stress of being alone: Removal from the colony, but not social subordination, increases fecal cortisol metabolite levels in eusocial naked mole-rats
In many social species, hierarchical status within the group is associated with differences in basal adrenocortical activity. We examined this relationship in naked mole-rats (Heterocephalus glaber), eusocial rodents with arguably the most extreme social hierarchies of all mammals. This species...
Year Published: 2020Topics: Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Mole Rat, Rodent
Citation: Edwards, P. D., Mooney, S. J., Bosson, C. O. et al. 2020. The stress of being alone: Removal from the colony, but not social subordination, increases fecal cortisol metabolite levels in eusocial naked mole-rats. Hormones and Behavior 121, 104720.
Read MoreForage, freedom of movement, and social interactions remain essential fundamentals for the welfare of high-level sport horses
Societal concerns for animal welfare extend to all domestic species, including high-level sport horses. The welfare of these horses, notably highlighted during the recent Olympics, has garnered significant public interest, prompting inquiries into their living conditions. Animal welfare studies have...
Year Published: 2024Topics: Husbandry & Management, Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Equine
Citation: Phelipon, R., Hennes, N., Ruet, A. et al. 2024. Forage, freedom of movement, and social interactions remain essential fundamentals for the welfare of high-level sport horses. Frontiers in Veterinary Science 11.
Read MoreShifts in naturalistic behaviors induced by early social isolation stress are associated with adult binge-like eating in female rats
Binge eating (BE) is a highly pervasive maladaptive coping strategy in response to severe early life stress such as emotional and social neglect. BE is described as repeated episodes of uncontrolled eating and is tightly linked with comorbid mental health...
Year Published: 2024Topics: Abnormal/Problematic Behavior, Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Rat, Rodent
Citation: Simon, T. B., Sierra, J., Williams, A. et al. 2024. Shifts in naturalistic behaviors induced by early social isolation stress are associated with adult binge-like eating in female rats. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience 18.
Read MoreLess activity means improved welfare? How pair housing influences pinyon jay (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus) behaviour
The activity level and specific behaviours exhibited by captive animals are crucial indicators of welfare. Stereotypies, or repetitive behaviours that have no apparent function or goal, are performed by animals experiencing poor conditions in their environment and indicate welfare concerns....
Year Published: 2024Topics: Abnormal/Problematic Behavior, Social Housing & CompanionshipAnimal Type: Bird, Other Bird
Citation: Wolff, L. M., Stevens, J. R. 2024. Less activity means improved welfare? How pair housing influences pinyon jay (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus) behaviour. Animal Welfare 33, e49.
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