PMID: 9175009Apr 1, 1997Paper

Observations on the prevalence of nest-building in non-breeding TO strain mice and their use of two nesting materials

Laboratory Animals
C M Sherwin

Abstract

The spontaneous performance of nest-building behaviour by non-breeding laboratory mice suggests that routinely providing nesting material might be a suitable environmental enrichment. If nesting material is to be provided routinely, this should have characteristics which are preferred, or at least accepted by a considerable proportion of the animal population; it should also be inexpensive. The present study therefore examined the prevalence of nest-building behaviour in 39 individually-housed, non-breeding, female mice, and their preferences for a commercial nesting product and a less expensive source of material (paper towels). Within minutes of the materials being placed in the cages, the mice began manipulating the paper towels. Thirty-six of the mice subsequently constructed nests during the first dark phase after the materials had been placed in the cage--the remaining three mice constructed nests during the following 48 h. The nests were usually constructed from a mixture of the two materials, though observations indicated the mice might have preferred characteristics of the inexpensive paper towels. There was a strong tendency to build nests in the same location used for sleeping prior to the nesting material being prov...Continue Reading

Citations

Feb 15, 2014·Journal of Neuroscience Methods·Paulin Jirkof
Dec 16, 2006·ILAR Journal·Janet C Gonder, Kathy Laber
Mar 19, 2005·ILAR Journal·Eric HutchinsonSue Vandewoude
Mar 19, 2005·ILAR Journal·Ann C BenefielWilliam T Greenough
May 23, 1998·Drug and Chemical Toxicology·I RodeiroM Garcia
Apr 9, 2013·Laboratory Animals·Paulin JirkofMargarete Arras
Oct 25, 2007·Lab Animal·Charmaine FoltzAxel Wolff
Jun 22, 2011·Lab Animal·Tamara GodbeyDean Jeffery
Aug 19, 2016·Genes, Brain, and Behavior·M ShelegR Zhou
Mar 21, 2019·Animal Models and Experimental Medicine·Kathryn Bayne
Nov 13, 2018·Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience·Jeremy D BailooHanno Würbel
Jul 25, 2019·Laboratory Animals·Kerstin SchwabeHeidrun Potschka

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