2021
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2020.607632
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The Impact of Acute Loud Noise on the Behavior of Laboratory Birds

Abstract: Husbandry procedures and facility settings, such as low-frequency fire alarms, can produce noises in a laboratory environment that cause stress to animals used in research. However, most of the data demonstrating harmful effects that have, consequently, led to adaptations to management, have largely come from laboratory rodents with little known of the impacts on avian behavior and physiology. Here we examined whether exposure to a routine laboratory noise, a low-frequency fire alarm test, induced behavioral c… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 80 publications
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“…The impacts of noise exposure on parental behaviour are in line with other studies reporting behavioural effects of noise on zebra finches fitness-relevant contexts, such as mate choice, intra-pair communication, vigilance, foraging and learning about new food sources ( Swaddle and Page, 2007 ; Villain et al, 2016 ; Evans et al, 2018 ; Liu et al, 2020 ; Corbani et al, 2021 ; Osbrink et al, 2021 ). Against this backdrop, the absence of an effect on reproductive success and offspring condition seems at first surprising and also to differ from the findings of an earlier, comparable noise exposure study in zebra finches ( Potvin and MacDougall-Shackleton, 2015 ) where traffic noise exposure led to more nesting attempts, delayed egg laying dates, and a higher embryo mortality rate than in pairs in a control group breeding without noise exposure.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…The impacts of noise exposure on parental behaviour are in line with other studies reporting behavioural effects of noise on zebra finches fitness-relevant contexts, such as mate choice, intra-pair communication, vigilance, foraging and learning about new food sources ( Swaddle and Page, 2007 ; Villain et al, 2016 ; Evans et al, 2018 ; Liu et al, 2020 ; Corbani et al, 2021 ; Osbrink et al, 2021 ). Against this backdrop, the absence of an effect on reproductive success and offspring condition seems at first surprising and also to differ from the findings of an earlier, comparable noise exposure study in zebra finches ( Potvin and MacDougall-Shackleton, 2015 ) where traffic noise exposure led to more nesting attempts, delayed egg laying dates, and a higher embryo mortality rate than in pairs in a control group breeding without noise exposure.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…The impacts of noise exposure on parental behaviour are in line with other studies reporting behavioural effects of noise on zebra finches fitness-relevant contexts, such as mate choice, intra-pair communication, vigilance, foraging and learning about new food sources (Swaddle & Page, 2007; Villain et al, 2016; Evans et al, 2018; Liu et al, 2020; Corbani et al, 2021; Osbrink et al, 2021). Against this backdrop, the absence of an effect on reproductive success and offspring condition seems at first surprising and also to differ from the findings of an earlier, comparable noise exposure study in zebra finches (Potvin & MacDougall-Shackleton 2015) where traffic noise exposure led to more nesting attempts, delayed egg laying dates, and a higher embryo mortality rate than pairs in a control group breeding without noise exposure.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%