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Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The mouse is the most commonly used mammal in scientific research, and housed in research facilities around the world. Mice are a social species, but when housing male mice together in a confined environment in the laboratory, aggression is often observed and can be problematic. Figh...

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Autores principales: Zidar, Josefina, Weber, Elin M., Ewaldsson, Birgit, Tjäder, Solveig, Lilja, Josefin, Mount, James, Svensson, Camilla I., Svensk, Emma, Udén, Eva, Törnqvist, Elin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6940771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31766349
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9121010
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author Zidar, Josefina
Weber, Elin M.
Ewaldsson, Birgit
Tjäder, Solveig
Lilja, Josefin
Mount, James
Svensson, Camilla I.
Svensk, Emma
Udén, Eva
Törnqvist, Elin
author_facet Zidar, Josefina
Weber, Elin M.
Ewaldsson, Birgit
Tjäder, Solveig
Lilja, Josefin
Mount, James
Svensson, Camilla I.
Svensk, Emma
Udén, Eva
Törnqvist, Elin
author_sort Zidar, Josefina
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The mouse is the most commonly used mammal in scientific research, and housed in research facilities around the world. Mice are a social species, but when housing male mice together in a confined environment in the laboratory, aggression is often observed and can be problematic. Fighting or trying to avoid fighting can be stressful. Furthermore, fighting can lead to injuries which can sometimes be fatal. Mouse aggression is therefore a significant welfare problem and has implications on the 3Rs (Replacing, Reducing, and Refining animal use in scientific procedures and education). In this study, we used a survey and workshops to collect the experiences of animal technicians, veterinarians, and researchers at Swedish research animal facilities relating to mouse aggression and what methods of preventing aggression they practice. Both group housing and single-housing as a consequence of aggression was perceived as problematic and stressful for the animals. In line with current recommendations from the literature, participants perceived that aggression occurred less if mice were grouped with litter mates at an early age, that nesting material was transferred at cage cleaning, and disturbance was kept to a minimum. Experience from practice will play a valuable part in developing guidelines for group-housed male mice. ABSTRACT: Animals used for scientific purposes are protected by EU legislation. Social animals should be kept in stable groups that enable species-typical social behavior and provide individuals with social comfort. However, when group-housing male mice, aggression within the homecage is a common husbandry and welfare problem. Excessive fighting and injuries due to aggression can cause pain and stress, resulting in individuals being euthanized or housed individually. In addition, stress can alter physiological parameters, risking scientific validity and generating larger sample sizes. Mouse aggression, and the consequences thereof, thus opposes the 3R goals of Refining the methods to minimize potential pain and suffering and Reducing the number of animals used. Animal technicians, veterinarians, and scientists using animals have valuable information on how these problems are experienced and handled in practice. We assembled these experiences from laboratory animal facilities in Sweden, mapping problems observed and identifying strategies used to prevent mouse aggression. In line with current literature, less aggression was perceived if mice were grouped before sexual maturity, re-grouping avoided and nesting material transferred at cage cleaning. Preventing aggression will minimize pain and suffering and enable housing of stable groups, leading to more reliable scientific outcomes and is thus of high 3Rs relevance.
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spelling pubmed-69407712020-01-09 Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden Zidar, Josefina Weber, Elin M. Ewaldsson, Birgit Tjäder, Solveig Lilja, Josefin Mount, James Svensson, Camilla I. Svensk, Emma Udén, Eva Törnqvist, Elin Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The mouse is the most commonly used mammal in scientific research, and housed in research facilities around the world. Mice are a social species, but when housing male mice together in a confined environment in the laboratory, aggression is often observed and can be problematic. Fighting or trying to avoid fighting can be stressful. Furthermore, fighting can lead to injuries which can sometimes be fatal. Mouse aggression is therefore a significant welfare problem and has implications on the 3Rs (Replacing, Reducing, and Refining animal use in scientific procedures and education). In this study, we used a survey and workshops to collect the experiences of animal technicians, veterinarians, and researchers at Swedish research animal facilities relating to mouse aggression and what methods of preventing aggression they practice. Both group housing and single-housing as a consequence of aggression was perceived as problematic and stressful for the animals. In line with current recommendations from the literature, participants perceived that aggression occurred less if mice were grouped with litter mates at an early age, that nesting material was transferred at cage cleaning, and disturbance was kept to a minimum. Experience from practice will play a valuable part in developing guidelines for group-housed male mice. ABSTRACT: Animals used for scientific purposes are protected by EU legislation. Social animals should be kept in stable groups that enable species-typical social behavior and provide individuals with social comfort. However, when group-housing male mice, aggression within the homecage is a common husbandry and welfare problem. Excessive fighting and injuries due to aggression can cause pain and stress, resulting in individuals being euthanized or housed individually. In addition, stress can alter physiological parameters, risking scientific validity and generating larger sample sizes. Mouse aggression, and the consequences thereof, thus opposes the 3R goals of Refining the methods to minimize potential pain and suffering and Reducing the number of animals used. Animal technicians, veterinarians, and scientists using animals have valuable information on how these problems are experienced and handled in practice. We assembled these experiences from laboratory animal facilities in Sweden, mapping problems observed and identifying strategies used to prevent mouse aggression. In line with current literature, less aggression was perceived if mice were grouped before sexual maturity, re-grouping avoided and nesting material transferred at cage cleaning. Preventing aggression will minimize pain and suffering and enable housing of stable groups, leading to more reliable scientific outcomes and is thus of high 3Rs relevance. MDPI 2019-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC6940771/ /pubmed/31766349 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9121010 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Zidar, Josefina
Weber, Elin M.
Ewaldsson, Birgit
Tjäder, Solveig
Lilja, Josefin
Mount, James
Svensson, Camilla I.
Svensk, Emma
Udén, Eva
Törnqvist, Elin
Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden
title Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden
title_full Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden
title_fullStr Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden
title_short Group and Single Housing of Male Mice: Collected Experiences from Research Facilities in Sweden
title_sort group and single housing of male mice: collected experiences from research facilities in sweden
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6940771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31766349
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9121010
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