4.3 Article

Physiological and behavioral effects of social introduction on adult male rhesus macaques

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 70, Issue 6, Pages 542-550

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/ajp.20526

Keywords

rhesus macaques; social introductions; biotelemetry; stress

Categories

Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P51 RR000167, RR012112, G20 RR016930-01, C06 RR020112-010001, RR00164, RR000167, P51 RR000164, RR019628, G20 RR016930, G20 RR019628, RR05169, P51 RR000164-440173] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [P01-MH076388, P01 MH076388-01, P01 MH076388] Funding Source: Medline

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Pair housing of laboratory macaques is widely considered to lead to positive changes in well-being, yet the process of introduction is viewed as potentially stressful and risk-prone. Behavioral and physiological data were collected on eight adult male rhesus macaques before, during, and after the process of introduction, in order to measure the initial stress of introduction as well as long-term changes in well-being. Socially experienced subjects, all implanted with biotelemetry devices, were studied in five successive phases: baseline (singly housed), I day each of protected contact and full contact introduction, post-introduction (1-3 weeks after introduction), and settled pairs (>= 20 weeks after introduction). One hundred and seventy-six hours of behavioral data and 672 hr of heart rate data were analyzed. Fecal cortisol was also measured for the baseline, post-introduction, and settled pair phases. All introductions were successful and subjects showed no physiological or behavioral signs of stress, such as increased heart rate, abnormal behavior, or psychological indices of distress (depressive/anxiety-related behavior). Agonism was minimal throughout the introduction process and over the subsequent months; only one wound was incurred over the course of the study. Levels of abnormal behaviors, psychological indices of distress, locomotion, inactivity, and affiliation showed improvements within several weeks after introduction; these changes were still present 5-9 months later for the latter two categories. Heart rates during introduction fell significantly in the settled pair phase, and also varied predictably with time of day. Fecal cortisol levels were lower in settled pairs than in single housing. The fact that reductions in abnormal behavior did not persist over the long term may have been confounded by increasing duration of time spent caged. The results of this study may be of practical use for designing and monitoring social introductions and suggest that managers should not dismiss the feasibility of successful pairing of adult male rhesus macaques.

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