Dissociation of stress behaviors in the chick social-separation-stress procedure

Separation from conspecifics in chicks produces an increase in distress vocalizations and a decrease in response to a noxious stimulus (stress-induced analgesia). This study questioned the relative contributions of novelty to the test chamber and social separation in mediating these stress responses. Eight-day-old chicks were tested either in isolation or in the presence of two social companions for a 3-min observation period in which distress vocalizations were recorded as well as the frequency of footlifts in response to a 50-microl injection of 0.10% formalin into the plantar surface of the footpad. In Expt. 1, chicks received six, 3-min test chamber habituation trials (vs. no habituation) one per day before testing; in Expt. 2, chicks were tested with mirrors placed in the chambers (vs. no mirrors). In both studies, isolated chicks in control groups (i.e., no habituation or no mirror) exhibited increased distress vocalizations and decreased nociceptive responses. In Expt. 1, habituation to the test chamber attenuated stress-induced analgesia but did not affect distress vocalizations. In Expt. 2, placement of mirrors in the test chamber attenuated distress vocalizations but did not affect stress-induced analgesia. These findings demonstrate a dissociation of stress behaviors in the chick social-separation-stress procedure: the stress-induced analgesia response is primarily mediated by novelty to the test apparatus while the distress vocalizations response is mediated by separation from conspecifics.

[1]  R. Jones,et al.  Behavioural and adrenocortical responses of domestic chicks to systematic reductions in group size and to sequential disturbance of companions by the experimenter , 1987, Behavioural Processes.

[2]  J. Panksepp,et al.  The biology of social attachments: opiates alleviate separation distress. , 1978, Biological psychiatry.

[3]  D. Kelly Stress-induced analgesia , 1986 .

[4]  R. A. Hughes,et al.  Differential effects of handling on isolation-induced vocalizations, hypoalgesia, and hyperthermia in domestic fowl , 1991, Physiology & Behavior.

[5]  Jaak Panksepp,et al.  The neurochemical control of crying , 1980, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.

[6]  C. Sahley,et al.  The Development of Habituation in the Domestic Chick , 1978 .

[7]  H. Taukulis,et al.  Postdrug retention of diazepam’s effects on habituation to a novel environment in an animal model of anxiety , 1992, Psychobiology.

[8]  N. C. Weed,et al.  Construct validation of behavioral indices of isolation stress and inflammatory nociception in young domestic fowl , 1994, Physiology & Behavior.

[9]  Barry H. Cohen Explaining Psychological Statistics , 2013 .

[10]  G. Gallup,et al.  An ethological analysis of open-field behaviour in chickens , 1980, Animal Behaviour.

[11]  R. A. Hughes,et al.  Morphine hyperalgesic effects on the formalin test in domestic fowl (Gallus gallus) , 1991, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.

[12]  S. Green,et al.  Animal models of anxiety. , 1991 .

[13]  M. W. Feltenstein,et al.  Anxiolytic properties of botanical extracts in the chick social separation-stress procedure , 2000, Psychopharmacology.

[14]  P. Willner Behavioural models in psychopharmacology : theoretical, industrial, and clinical perspectives , 1990 .

[15]  R. A. Hughes,et al.  Opiate effects of isolation stress in domestic fowl , 1994, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.

[16]  R. Jones Habituation to Human Beings Via Visual Contact in Docile and Flighty Strains of Domestic Chicks , 1995, International Journal of Comparative Psychology.

[17]  I. Ábrahám,et al.  Postnatal handling alters the activation of stress‐related neuronal circuitries , 2000, The European journal of neuroscience.

[18]  K. Franklin,et al.  The stress of a novel environment reduces formalin pain: possible role of serotonin. , 1986, European journal of pharmacology.

[19]  K. Sufka,et al.  Benzodiazepine receptor function in the chick social separation-stress procedure. , 1999, Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology.

[20]  D. Waddington,et al.  Modification of fear in domestic chicks, Gallus gallus domesticus, via regular handling and early environmental enrichment , 1992, Animal Behaviour.

[21]  K. Sufka,et al.  Chlordiazepoxide reverses social-separation-induced distress vocalizations and analgesia in young domestic fowl. , 1996 .