Working with what you’ve got: Changes in thermal preference and behavior in mice with or without nesting material
2011
Gaskill, Brianna N. | Rohr, Stephanie A. | Pajor, Edmond A. | Lucas, Jeffrey R. | Garner, Joseph P.
In laboratories mice are typically housed at ambient temperatures (Tₐ) of 20–24°C, which are below their average preferred Tₐ of ≈30°C. Adjusting laboratory Tₐ is not a solution because preferences differ depending on activity, time of the day, and gender. We tested the hypothesis that providing mice with nesting material will allow behavioral thermoregulation and reduce aversion to colder Tₐ. We housed C57BL/6J mice with and without nesting material in a set of 3 connected cages, each maintained at a different Tₐ (20, 25, or 30°C). Mice were confined in and given free access to the Tₐ options to determine if thermotaxis or nest building was the primary mode of behavioral thermoregulation. As predicted, nesting material reduced aversion to 20°C but the overall preference, in both treatments, was still 30°C. Inactive and nesting behaviors were more likely to be seen in contact with nesting material while active behaviors were more likely to be observed when not in contact. Nest quality increased with decreasing Tₐ when mice could not use thermotaxis but nest quality was uncorrelated with Tₐ when thermotaxis was possible. Males decreased nest quality with increasing temperatures but females showed no correlation. We conclude that nesting material does not alter thermal preferences for 30°C when thermotaxis is possible, indicating thermotaxis as the primary mode of behavioral thermoregulation. However, when thermotaxis is not possible, mice adjust nest shape depending on the Tₐ. Nesting material appears to partially compensate for cooler Tₐ and is especially important when mice are inactive. Therefore, nesting material may be a solution to the mismatch between laboratory Tₐ and mouse thermal preferences.
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