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The response of newly born mice to odors of murine colostrum and milk: Unconditionally attractive, conditionally discriminated
Author(s) -
Al Aïn Syrina,
Mingioni Mathieu,
Patris Bruno,
Schaal Benoist
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
developmental psychobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1098-2302
pISSN - 0012-1630
DOI - 10.1002/dev.21220
Subject(s) - odor , colostrum , lactation , attraction , biology , zoology , developmental psychology , psychology , pregnancy , neuroscience , immunology , antibody , linguistics , philosophy , genetics
It is a general rule that milk conveys chemosensory cues that are attractive to mammalian neonates. This study investigated whether compositional fluctuations in milk along lactation induce variations in newborn mouse pups' (Mus musculus, strain BALB/c) attraction to milk odor. Pups differing in suckling experience were exposed to the odor of milk sampled from females varying in lactational stage. Immediately after birth, suckling‐inexperienced (P0) and suckling‐experienced (P0 suck ) pups were assayed in a series of paired‐choice tests contrasting murine milk [of lactation days 0, 3, 15 (abridged L0, L3, L15, respectively)] and a blank (water) to evaluate olfactory detection and attraction of milk odor. Preference tests further paired these milk two‐by‐two to assess their relative attraction. Results showed first that P0 and P0 suck pups detect and positively orient to any milk odor. When L0 is presented against L15 milk, P0 pups orient for a similar duration towards these odor stimuli, whereas P0 suck pups spend more time toward the odor of L0 than of L15 milk. Finally, P0 suck pups orient similarly to odors of L0 milk collected before/after the first suckling episode (L0 and L0 suck , respectively), but the odor of L0 milk was more attractive than that of L3 milk. Thus, mouse pups' positive orientation toward the odors of murine colostrum (assumed to correspond to L0/L0 suck milk) and later‐lactation milk appears unconditional of previous suckling experience, whereas their ability to discriminate or display preference between milk differing in lactation stage appears conditional on postnatal exposure effects. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 56: 1365–1376, 2014.

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