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Pup and object carrying by maternally and nonmaternally behaving female albino rats (Rattus norvegicus).
Authors:Jakubowski  Moshe; Terkel  Joseph
Abstract:Pups and toys (rubber dropper-bulbs) were presented to 48 nulliparous and 10 lactating female albino Sprague-Dawley rats either together (choice test) or in separate tests. Regardless of their reproductive state, Ss fell into 3 categories according to their behavior: (a) Postpartum Ss as well as virgins that behaved maternally picked up pups much faster than toys, carried more pups than toys, gathered young into the nest, but scattered toys outside the nest site. (b) Virgins that carried young spontaneously but did not show any other elements of maternal behavior picked up pups and toys after equal latencies, carried pups and toys in equal numbers, and scattered both the pups and the toys about the floor of the cage. (c) Virgins that ignored pups did not carry young, but they did show high levels of toy carrying and dispersed the toys about the cage. It is proposed that the term retrieving should be limited, by its definition, to those cases in which the objects are carried to a specific location. Thus, pup retrieval was seen exclusively in Ss that showed maternal behavior (i.e., crouching, pup licking), because only these Ss carried pups consistently to the nest. On the other hand, pup carrying shown by nonmaternally behaving Ss and toy carrying shown by all Ss are both cases of scattered, nondirected object carrying, rather than retrieving. (13 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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