15. Housing and husbandry Provide details of housing and husbandry conditions, including any environmental enrichment. explanation
The environment determines the health and wellbeing of the animals and every aspect of it can potentially affect their behavioural and physiological responses, thereby affecting research outcomes [1]. Different studies may be sensitive to different environmental factors, and particular aspects of the environment necessary to report may depend on the type of study [2]. Examples of housing and husbandry conditions known to affect animal welfare and research outcomes are listed in the table below; consider reporting these elements and any other housing and husbandry conditions likely to influence the study outcomes.
Information to report | Examples of effects on laboratory animals |
Cage/tank/housing system (type and dimensions) | Affects behaviour [3] and fear learning [4]. Tank colour affects stress in aquatic species [5,6]. |
Food and water (type, composition, supplier and access) | Affects body weight, tumour development, nephropathy severity [7], and the threshold for developing Parkinsonian symptoms [8]. Maternal diet affects offspring body weight [9]. |
Bedding and nesting material | Affects behavioural responses to stress [10] and pain [11]. |
Temperature and humidity | Modifies tumour progression [12]. Regulates sexual differentiation in zebrafish [13]. |
Sanitation (frequency of cage/tank water changes, material transferred, water quality) | Affects blood pressure, heart rate, behaviour [14]. Adds an additional source of variation [15,16]. |
Social environment (group size and composition/stocking density) | Compromises animal welfare [17]. Induces aggressive behaviour [18,19] and stress [6]. |
Biosecurity (level) | The microbiological status of animals causes variation in systemic disease parameters [20]. |
Lighting (type, schedule and intensity) | Modifies immune and stress responses [21]. |
Environmental enrichment
|
Reduces anxiety [22,23], stress [22,23] and abnormal repetitive behaviour [24-26]. Reduces susceptibility to epilepsy [27] and osteoarthritis [28] and modifies the pathology of neurological disorders [29]. Increases foraging behaviour in fish [30]. |
Sex of the experimenter | Affects physiological stress and pain behaviour [31]. |
Environment, either deprived or enriched, can affect a wide range of physiological and behavioural responses [32]. Specific details to report include, but are not limited to, structural enrichment (e.g. elevated surfaces, dividers), resources for species-typical activities (e.g. nesting material, shelters or gnawing sticks for rodents; plants or gravel for aquatic species), toys or other tools used to stimulate exploration, exercise (e.g. running wheel), and novelty. If no environmental enrichment was provided, this should be clearly stated with justification. Similarly, scientific justification needs to be reported for withholding food and water [33], and for singly housing animals [34,35].
If space is an issue, relevant housing and husbandry details can be provided in the form of a link to the information in a public repository, or as supplementary information.
References
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- Haseman JK, Ney E, Nyska A and Rao GN (2003). Effect of diet and animal care/housing protocols on body weight, survival, tumor incidences, and nephropathy severity of F344 rats in chronic studies. Toxicol Pathol. doi: 10.1080/01926230390241927
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