Nesting Behavior of House Mice (Mus Domesticus) Selected for Increased Wheel-Running Activity

被引:0
|
作者
Patrick A. Carter
John G. Swallow
Sarah J. Davis
Theodore Garland
机构
[1] Washington State University,School of Biological Sciences
[2] University of Maryland,Department of Zoology
[3] College Park,undefined
来源
Behavior Genetics | 2000年 / 30卷
关键词
Artificial selection; evolutionary constraint; correlated response; genetic correlation; nesting behavior; wheel-running behavior;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Nest building was measured in “active” (housed with access to running wheels) and “sedentary” (without wheel access) mice (Mus domesticus) from four replicate lines selected for 10 generations for high voluntary wheel-running behavior, and from four randombred control lines. Based on previous studies of mice bidirectionally selected for thermoregulatory nest building, it was hypothesized that nest building would show a negative correlated response to selection on wheel-running. Such a response could constrain the evolution of high voluntary activity because nesting has also been shown to be positively genetically correlated with successful production of weaned pups. With wheel access, selected mice of both sexes built significantly smaller nests than did control mice. Without wheel access, selected females also built significantly smaller nests than did control females, but only when body mass was excluded from the statistical model, suggesting that body mass mediated this correlated response to selection. Total distance run and mean running speed on wheels was significantly higher in selected mice than in controls, but no differences in amount of time spent running were measured, indicating a complex cause of the response of nesting to selection for voluntary wheel running.
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页码:85 / 94
页数:9
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