Introducing singly housed rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) into isosexual pairs is widely considered to improve welfare. The population of laboratory rhesus macaques is heterogeneous on a variety of factors and there is little literature available to directly evaluate the influence of many of these factors on the benefits of pair housing. Subjects were 46 adult female and 18 adult male rhesus macaques housed at the Tulane National Primate Research Center and the Yerkes National Primate Research Center. Behavioral data totalling 859 h and serum cortisol levels derived from 312 serum samples were analyzed for main effects of housing condition, comparing single housing to pair housing. In addition, a series of analyses were performed to test for interactions between housing condition and seven independent variables: sex, age, prior duration of single housing, presence or absence of a history of self-injurious behavior, and dominance rank, levels of affiliation and agonism in the paired setting. After the collection of 4–8 h of baseline data and three serum cortisol samples, pairs of individuals were introduced to one another and data collection was repeated, no earlier than 4 weeks after introduction. In pair housing both female and male subjects showed decrease in abnormal behavior (females: 54% reduction; P = 0.001; males: 18% reduction; P = 0.0007) and anxiety-related behavior (females: 35% reduction; P = 0.0001; males: 41% reduction; P = 0.0001), and increases in locomotion (females: 41% increase; P = 0.0001; males: 76% increase: P = 0.002). In pair housing, there were no significant sex differences in social behavior. Descriptively, paired females spent 12% of samples engaged in affiliative behavior and 0.5% engaged in agonistic behavior (back-transformed arcsin square root means). The corresponding values for males were 12% and 0.3%. No interaction effects were detected with any of the independent variables tested in this study. Cortisol values varied with sex but did not differ between housing conditions; no differences were detected when any of the above variables were included in the statistical model. Results support the general consensus among those studying the welfare of captive primates that social housing is a potent means for promoting behavioral indicators of the psychological well-being of laboratory primates. These results are of considerable practical significance and include information that refutes common perceptions about the unsuitability of males as socialization candidates, perceived negative
The initial kinetics of accumulation of chlorophylls (Chi) were analyzed during optimal greening of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii y-1 at 380C. Acetate was required for maximal synthesis of Chi, which occurred at a linear rate when degreened cells were exposed to light. 38°C (14).
This study tested 3 food enrichment items mentioned in a laboratory primate newsletter with 6 adult Eulemur macaco and 3 adult Lemur catta to examine whether the items would affect the behavior of the lemurs. The results suggest that Food Enrichment Item 3 (a wire box filled with whole grapes, apples, or both hidden in straw hung from a branch within the enclosure) caused a significant decrease in the incidence of resting and a significant increase in the incidences of playing and grooming, with no significant effect on the incidence of feeding or foraging. The lemurs' behavior appeared to be most affected by the food enrichment item that required the most manipulation, closely followed by an enrichment that required a moderate amount of manipulation. The order of the exposure to the food enrichment items and the day of the week appear to have an attenuation effect on these behaviors and did affect the incidence of 3 stereotypic behaviors exhibited by a male L. catta such that 3 behaviors declined in occurrence as the study progressed.
The kinetics of accumulation of light harvesting chlorophyll (Chi) a/b-binding polypeptides (LHCPs) in thylakoid membranes were analyzed during greening of Chiamydomonas reinhardtii y-1 at 380C. Initial accumulation of LHCPs in thylakoid membranes was linear; LHCP precursors or polypeptides in transit within the chloroplast stroma were not detected. The rate of accumulation in the light was at least five-fold greater than that in the dark. The relatively small amount of LHCPs that accumulated in the dark was integrated properly in the membrane, as judged by the pattern of cleavage in vitro by exogenous proteases, and did not turn over at a significant rate in vivo. The kinetic data suggested that in y-1 cells either translation of LHCP mRNA was inhibited in the dark or newly synthesized polypeptides were degraded concurrently with transport into the chloroplast unless rescued by Chi. LHCPs accumulated in cells of the Chi b-deficient strain pg-113 at the same rate in the dark or the light at 380C, an indication that light did not affect translation of LHCP mRNA. Membraneassociated LHCPs in pg-i 13 cells were completely degraded, in contrast to those in y-1 cells, by exogenous proteases, which suggested that pg-1 13 cells are deficient in a proteolytic activity. A peptidase was recovered from y-1 cells in a membrane fraction with a buoyant density slightly less than that of thylakoid membranes. Although a role for this activity in degradation of LHCPs has not been established, the specific activity of this peptidase in pg-113 cells was only 10 to 15% of the level in y-1 cells.
This study evaluated the application of positive reinforcement training (PRT) as an intervention for abnormal behaviors in singly housed laboratory rhesus macaques at 2 large primate facilities. Training involved basic control behaviors and body-part presentation. The study compared baseline behavioral data on 30 adult males and 33 adult females compared with 3 treatment phases presented in counterbalanced order: 6 min per week of PRT, 20 or 40 min per week of PRT, and 6 min per week of unstructured human interaction (HI). Within-subject parametric tests detected no main or interaction effects involving experimental phase. However, among a subset of subjects with levels of abnormal in the top quartile of the range (n = 15), abnormal behavior was reduced from 35% to 25% of samples with PRT but not with HI. These results suggest that short durations of PRT applied as enrichment for this species and in this context may not in itself be sufficient intervention for abnormal behavior because levels remained high. However, it may be appropriate as an adjunct to other interventions and may be best targeted to the most severely affected individuals.
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