4.1 Article

Nipple Preference and Contests in Suckling Kittens of the Domestic Cat Are Unrelated to Presumed Nipple Quality

期刊

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY
卷 51, 期 4, 页码 322-332

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dev.20371

关键词

sibling competition; teat order; suckling performance; aggression; domestic cat; Felis silvestris catus

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tire studied tire development of suckling behavior and weight gain in 11 litters (52 kittens) of free-ranging domestic cats until postnatal clay 28 just before the start of weaning. In six of these litters, a:e also recorded milk intake and contests for access to nipples. Already within 12 hr of birth kittens showed a preference for posterior nipples, and by postnatal day 3 each had developed a preference for particular nipples. In fact, 86% of kittens used one particular nipple most often, and even a:hen the mother changed the side she lay on to nurse. Contests for access to nipples occurred throughout the study period at an average rate of one to two contests per kitten per hour of nursing. Contrary to suggestions in the literature that kittens compete for more productive cripples, we found no relation between kittens' use of particular stipples and their weight gain, milk intake, or involvement in contests during suckling. We suggest that kittens' preference for posterior nipples as well as their establishment of an individual teat order might function to optimize the number of nipples remaining productive across lactation, and to reduce energetically costly scrambles and potentially injurious contests among littermates. (C) 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 51: 322-332, 2009.

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