Abstract

Maternal behavior and serum prolactin were measured in pregnant and virgin female rats. Pregnant rats were either ovariectomized or shamovariectomized on Day 17 of pregnancy, while virgin females were ovariectomized at the same age. Two days after surgery nests were rated and the three treatment groups were tested for responsiveness to rat pups. Both pregnant treatment groups built superior nests compared to the virgin group and also responded more frequently to rat pups within a 1 hr test period than the virgin controls. In addition, significantly more ovariectomized pregnant subjects responded to pups than did intact pregnant females. Serum prolactin levels did not differ among the three treatments nor did exposure to pups affect serum prolactin levels. In each treatment group serum prolactin was less than 15 ng/ml, well below the 139.7 ng/ml mean found on Day 23 of pregnancy. These data suggest that high levels of serum prolactin during late pregnancy are not essential for the initiation of maternal behavior in the rat.

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