Familiarity of an environment prevents song suppression in isolated zebra finches

Anja Tamara Zai, Diana Isabel Rodrigues, Anna E Stepien, Iris Adam, Corinna Lorenz, Nicolas Giret, Richard H.R. Hahnloser
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Abstract

Despite the wide use of zebra finches as an animal model to study vocal learning and production, little is known about impacts on their welfare caused by routine experimental manipulations such as changing their social context. Here we conduct a post-hoc analysis of singing rate, an indicator of positive welfare, to gain insights into stress caused by social isolation, a common experimental manipulation. We find that isolation in an unfamiliar environment reduces singing rate for several days, indicating the presence of an acute stressor. However, we find no such decrease when social isolation is caused by either removal of a social companion or by transfer to a familiar environment. Furthermore, during repeated brief periods of isolation, singing rate remains high when isolation is induced by removal of social companions, but it fails to recover from a suppressed state when isolation is induced by recurrent transfer to an unknown environment. These findings suggest that stress from social isolation is negligible compared to stress caused by environmental changes and that frequent short visits of an unfamiliar environment are detrimental rather than beneficial. Together, these insights can serve to refine experimental studies and design paradigms maximizing the birds' wellbeing and vocal output.
熟悉环境可防止孤立斑马雀的鸣声抑制
尽管斑马雀被广泛用作研究发声学习和产生的动物模型,但人们对改变其社会环境等常规实验操作对其福利的影响知之甚少。在此,我们对斑马雀的歌唱率(一项积极的福利指标)进行了事后分析,以深入了解社会隔离这一常见实验操作对斑马雀造成的压力。我们发现,在一个陌生环境中被隔离几天后,歌唱率会降低,这表明存在急性压力源。然而,我们发现,如果社会隔离是由移走社会同伴或转移到熟悉的环境造成的,则不会出现这种降低。此外,在反复的短暂隔离期间,当通过移除社会同伴引起隔离时,歌唱率仍然很高,但当通过反复转移到未知环境引起隔离时,歌唱率无法从抑制状态恢复。这些发现表明,与环境变化造成的压力相比,社会隔离造成的压力可以忽略不计,频繁地短期访问陌生环境是有害而非有益的。这些发现有助于完善实验研究和设计范例,最大限度地提高鸟类的福利和声音输出。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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