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Physiol Behav ; 55(4): 685-9, 1994 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8190795

RESUMEN

The present experiments investigated pre- and postnatal maternal effects on aggressive behavior in rats. Resident-intruder aggressive behavior of male rats in colonies (two males and two females) was studied in five experimental groups: 1 = WWY (n = 7) the two males of each colony were wild (biological father and mother were wild) fostered by a wild mother; 2 = WAY (n = 11) the two males were wild fostered by an albino Wistar mother; 3 = AAY (n = 11) the two males were albino (biological father and mother were Wistar) fostered by an albino mother; 4 = AWY (n = 12) the two males were albino fostered by a wild mother; and 5 = HWX+HAX (n = 9) one of the males was hybrid born and reared by a wild mother (the father was albino) and the other was also hybrid but born and reared by an albino mother (the father was wild). Each test lasted 10 min and the intruder was always a Wistar male. Aggression of wild rats was higher than the laboratory ones, independently of the mother (albino or wild) they were fostered by. However, hybrid males born and reared by a wild mother were more aggressive than those that were born and reared by an albino mother, in spite of the father being wild. In conclusion, crossfostering has little effect on territorial aggression, but prenatal maternal effects seem to play a major role on the ontogeny of aggressive behavior of male rats.


Asunto(s)
Agresión/psicología , Conducta Materna , Privación Materna , Medio Social , Conducta Agonística , Animales , Femenino , Masculino , Ratas , Ratas Wistar , Tiempo de Reacción , Territorialidad
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