Sensitized virgins and postpartum lactating mothers, both exhibiting maternal behavior, were given donor litters that increased in age by 1 day, for 28 days, starting at the onset of maternal behavior. Each day females were tested for maternal behavior with pups 4-8 days old: Maternal care (i.e., nursing/crouching, retrieving, nest building and licking) and maternal withdrawal, rejection, and prevention of nursing were recorded. After the ninth day, females were also tested with the progressively older pups from 10 to 28 days of age with which they were living. Virgins and lactating mothers showed generally similar patterns of maternal care although some differences were found, and they declined in maternal behavior toward the older pups in a similar manner. Maternal behavior did not decline in tests with younger pups. The results are interpreted as supporting the hypothesis that the decline as well as the maintenance of maternal behavior postpartum is nonhormonally mediated.
The responses of unweaned juveniles, 18 to 27 days of age, in brief tests with pups younger than 10 days were observed during initial exposure and at 4-6-day intervals. They showed no aversive responses and actively sought contact with the pups until 24 days when contact-seeking declined sharply. Young exposed to pups before 24 days continued to seek contact with them after 24 days showing an effect of the prior experience. Juveniles given a choice between young pups and a warm bowl chose the pups; given a choice between young pups and age mates, they chose the young pups until day 23, but chose the age mates after then. When housed continuously with young pups at 22 days of age, 5 of 9 retrieved and grouped pups with a latency of 1 day. Our results indicate that timidity or fear of novelty develops in rats in this situation about Day 24 and thereafter is a factor inhibiting the expression of positive social behavior toward pups.
Male and female rats that were nonhandled or that were handled from weaning, and that had intact or impaired olfaction (intranasal zinc sulfate), were sensitized through continuous pup exposure commencing at 30, 45, 60, or 90 days of age. Nonhandled males and females were alike in latencies to become maternal at Day 30 but thereafter latencies of females became shorter and latencies of males lengthened; by 90 days males had markedly longer latencies than females and only 1/3 became maternal. Handling facilitated sensitization at 30 days among males and females but only among males at 45 and 60 days. Intranasal zinc sulfate reduced latencies of both males and females at all ages tested, but appeared most effective after 45 days of age. Gender differences in latencies persisted in adult animals even after combined treatments. Results indicate that both timidity and olfaction inhibit the onset of maternal responses to pups in virgin males and females, but they differ in relative importance by age and gender.
Bilateral peripeduncular (PPN) lesions made on the seventh postpartum day (L7) with either radiofrequency (RF) current or N-methyl-d,l-aspartic acid (NMDA)/phosphate buffered saline (PBS) reduced maternal aggression (MA) and partially inhibited lactation without producing significant deficits in other items of maternal behavior (MB). RF-PPN lesions did not interfere with prolactin secretion, which suggests that there was deficient oxytocinergic activity. The deficit in MA was not due to interruption of afferent suckling input to the PPN: either thelectomizing females (day L6) or producing bilateral knifecuts in the mesencephalon (placed caudal to the level of the PPN; Day L7) had no effect on MA, but both procedures impaired lactation. Deficits in MA produced by RF-PPN lesions developed gradually between Days L4 and L7; lesions made either prepartum or on Day L1 did not impair MA or MB. Deficits in lactation first appeared after RF-PPN lesions on Day L1.
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