INVESTIGADORES
MARIN Raul Hector
artículos
Título:
A ‘pebble test of anxiety’ did not differentiate between Japanese quail chicks from genetic lines differing in fearfulness and stress responsiveness
Autor/es:
JONES, R. B.; MARIN, R. H .; D. G. SATTERLEE
Revista:
APPLIED ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR SCIENCE
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Año: 2004 vol. 87 p. 287 - 291
ISSN:
0168-1591
Resumen:
It has been suggested that the time taken by an individually tested domestic chick to begin pecking at pebbles on the floor of a novel arena might be used as a test of fear and anxiety, with low latencies to peck indicating low fear and vice versa, and as a potential selection criterion ‘to choose fowls with the best performance later in life’ (Salvatierra and Arce, 2001). The present study tested the above hypotheses by comparing the responses of one-day-old Japanese quail chicks from genetic lines known to show high (HS) or low (LS) levels of fearfulness when exposed individually to similar test situation. Since social separation is a stressful event the quail were housed individually or in groups before test to establish whether the prior social environment influenced behaviour in the pebble test. The LS chicks walked sooner and more than HS ones but there were no line effects on pecking at the pebbles. Chicks housed individually walked and pecked at the pebbles sooner than did those that were housed in a group prior to test, indicating that sudden isolation elicited greater fear in SOC than IND quail. The higher levels of activity then shown by SOC than IND quail probably reflected greater social reinstatement motivation in socially housed birds. Although the inconsistency between the present results and those of Salvatierra and Arce (2001) might simply reflect species differences our findings sound a cautionary note and point to the need for further study before a pebble test could be confidently used to assess fearfulness.