野生家鼠的人格发展:生命早期营养敏感期的证据

Nicole Walasek, Milan Jovicic, Anja Guenther
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摘要

不断变化的环境条件给生物带来了严峻的挑战,例如,会破坏食物的获取。在不同的物种和性状中,动物利用表型可塑性来迅速适应这种变化。之前的研究表明,野生家鼠能够在短短三代内根据食物质量的变化调整压力应对方式。然而,我们不知道在本体发育过程中,变化的条件何时会引起表型调整。我们通过实验测试了笼养野生家鼠(Mus musculus domesticus)在本体发育过程中(胎儿期、新生儿期、断奶期或青春期后期),标准食物和优质食物之间的食物转换何时会影响其人格发展(压力应对和压力感知)。在本体发育过程中的不同时间点(断奶期、青春期早期、青春期晚期和成年期),我们在开放场地和高架加迷宫中对小鼠的人格特质进行了评估。我们观察到三个重要发现。首先,随着小鼠年龄的增长,它们倾向于使用更多的被动压力应对策略,这表明它们的风险厌恶程度更高。这种关系与食物质量无关。然而,与接受标准质量食物的小鼠相比,接受高质量食物喂养的小鼠平均表现出更积极的压力应对策略。其次,胎儿期可能是应对营养质量下降的压力的敏感期。第三,营养质量的提高可能会减缓与年龄相关的被动压力应对策略的转变。我们的研究结果与之前观察到的生活在以高质量食物喂养的半自然围栏中的小鼠被动应对压力的情况形成了鲜明对比。我们认为,笼养小鼠与群养小鼠的社会环境可能是造成这些差异的原因。我们的研究结果突出表明,有必要对圈养动物和半自由生活动物的整个发育过程进行实验比较。最终,这类研究将有助于我们理解发育、营养、(社会)环境和个性之间的复杂关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Personality development in wild house mice: Evidence for a nutrition-dependent sensitive period early in life
Changing environmental conditions pose serious challenges to organisms, for example, by disrupting access to food. Across species and traits, animals use phenotypic plasticity to rapidly adjust to such changes. Previous work has demonstrated that wild house mice are able to adjust stress coping to changing food quality within just three generations. However, we do not know when during ontogeny changing conditions induce phenotypic adjustments. We tested experimentally when during ontogeny (as fetus, newborn, weanling, or late adolescent) a food switch between standard and high-quality food shapes personality development (stress coping and stress perception) in cage-housed, wild house mice (Mus musculus domesticus). Personality traits were assessed in the Open Field and the Elevated Plus Maze at different time points during ontogeny (weaning, early adolescence, late adolescence, and adulthood). We observed three key findings. First, as mice grow older they tend to use more passive stress-coping strategies, indicating higher risk aversion. This relationship holds irrespective of food quality. However, mice fed with high-quality food show, on average, more active stress coping compared to mice receiving standard-quality food. Second, the fetal life stage might be a sensitive period for stress coping in response to experiencing decreases in nutritional quality. Third, experiencing an increase in nutritional quality may slow the age-related switch towards a passive stress-coping strategy. Our findings contrast previous work observing passive stress coping in mice living in semi-natural enclosures fed with high-quality food. We propose that the social environment of mice living in cages vs mice living in small groups may explain these differences. Our results highlight the need for experiments across the breadth of development comparing captive and semi-free-living animals. Ultimately, such studies will help us understand the complex relationships between development, nutrition, the (social) environment, and personality.
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