The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs

von Engelhardt N, Kowalski GJ, Günther A (2015)
Frontiers in Zoology 12(Suppl 1): S13.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Abstract / Bemerkung
Background Prenatal conditions influence offspring development in many species. In mammals, the effects of social density have traditionally been considered a detrimental form of maternal stress. Now their potential adaptive significance is receiving greater attention.Sex-specific effects of maternal social instability on offspring in guinea pigs (Cavia aperea f. porcellus) have been interpreted as adaptations to high social densities, while the effects of low social density are unknown. Hence, we compared morphological, behavioural and physiological development between offspring born to mothers housed either individually or in groups during the second half of pregnancy. Results Females housed individually and females housed in groups gave birth to litters of similar size and sex-ratios, and there were no differences in birth weight. Sons of individually-housed mothers grew faster than their sisters, whereas daughters ofgroup-housed females grew faster than their brothers, primarily due to an effect on growth of daughters. There were few effects on offspring behaviour. Baseline cortisol levels in saliva of pups on day 1 and day 7 were not affected, but we saw a blunted cortisol response to social separation on day 7 in sons of individually-housed females and daughters of group-housed females. The effects were consistent across two replicate experiments. Conclusions The observed effects only partially support the adaptive hypothesis. Increased growth of daughters may be adaptive under high densities due to increasedfemale competition, but it is unclear why growth of sons is not increased under low social densities when males face less competition from older, dominant males. The differences in growth may be causally linked to sex-specific effects on cortisol response, although individual cortisol response and growth were not correlated, and various other mechanisms are possible. The observed sex-specific effects on early development are intriguing, yet the potential adaptive benefits and physiological mechanisms require further study.
Stichworte
maternal effects; social; density; prenatal; development; sex-specific; growth; behaviour; guinea pig; Cavia aperea f. porcellus
Erscheinungsjahr
2015
Zeitschriftentitel
Frontiers in Zoology
Band
12
Ausgabe
Suppl 1
Art.-Nr.
S13
ISSN
1742-9994
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft und die Universität Bielefeld gefördert.
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2778793

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von Engelhardt N, Kowalski GJ, Günther A. The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs. Frontiers in Zoology. 2015;12(Suppl 1): S13.
von Engelhardt, N., Kowalski, G. J., & Günther, A. (2015). The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs. Frontiers in Zoology, 12(Suppl 1), S13. doi:10.1186/1742-9994-12-S1-S13
von Engelhardt, Nikolaus, Kowalski, Gabriele J, and Günther, Anja. 2015. “The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs”. Frontiers in Zoology 12 (Suppl 1): S13.
von Engelhardt, N., Kowalski, G. J., and Günther, A. (2015). The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs. Frontiers in Zoology 12:S13.
von Engelhardt, N., Kowalski, G.J., & Günther, A., 2015. The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs. Frontiers in Zoology, 12(Suppl 1): S13.
N. von Engelhardt, G.J. Kowalski, and A. Günther, “The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs”, Frontiers in Zoology, vol. 12, 2015, : S13.
von Engelhardt, N., Kowalski, G.J., Günther, A.: The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs. Frontiers in Zoology. 12, : S13 (2015).
von Engelhardt, Nikolaus, Kowalski, Gabriele J, and Günther, Anja. “The maternal social environment shapes offspring growth, physiology, and behavioural phenotype in guinea pigs”. Frontiers in Zoology 12.Suppl 1 (2015): S13.
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2 Zitationen in Europe PMC

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Fischer S, Pujol NT, Bolton R, Hurst JL, Stockley P., Sci Rep 8(1), 2018
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