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Growth and reproduction of mice cross‐fostered between parents reared at different temperatures
Author(s) -
Barnett S. A.,
Neil Alexandra C.
Publication year - 1971
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1971.sp009490
Subject(s) - biology , reproduction , body weight , selective breeding , inbred strain , zoology , demography , endocrinology , genetics , gene , sociology
1. Litters of mice, Mus musculus , of the highly inbred strain A2G/Tb, were reduced to four at birth and cross‐fostered within and between three classes: (i) bred at 21° C (controls); (ii) the first generation reared at −3° C (‘new stock’); (iii) the seventeenth to twenty‐third generations reared at −3° C (‘old stock’). There were therefore nine classes of fostered mice. 2. There was a higher death rate in the nest and after wearing among mice of new‐stock parentage, regardless of foster‐parentage. 3. Litters reared at 21° C were heavier at 3 weeks than those reared at −3° C, regardless of parentage; the effect of temperature was also evident in body weights at 16 weeks. There was compensatory growth between 3 and 16 weeks, shown by lower variance in body weight, within classes, at 16 weeks. 4. Members of fostered litters were mated, and their reproductive performance recorded to the age of 28 weeks. 5. More young were born and weaned per pair at 21° C than at −3° C, regardless of true parentage. In contrast, nestling mortality depended principally on true parentage; there were fewer deaths among the young of mice whose true parents were old stock, regardless of foster‐parentage; this effect was especially evident for losses of whole litters. 6. Mean body weights of the nine classes of fostered females were positively correlated with mean numbers of young born to them, and with the mean weights of their young at 3 weeks; but there was no such correlation with death rates among their young. 7. Young of some of the fostered mice were also mated. The effect of old‐stock ancestry on nestling mortality was not evident in this further generation. Some mice were studied after transfer between temperatures without fostering. Their breeding performance confirmed that old‐stock mice did not retain their superiority after two generations at 21° C. 8. General conclusions are: (i) differences of growth between classes of fostered mice reflected the temperature in which the mice were reared, whereas mortality among fostered mice was influenced by the conditions they had experienced in utero ; (ii) the production of young by the fostered mice was influenced by environmental temperature, while the death rates among these young in the nest reflected the conditions experienced in utero by their parents.

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