Abstract

Play fighting in rats involves attack and defense of the nape. To protect the nape, rats use a variety of defensive tactics, with different strains having specific preferences. Targeting of the nape is established before weaning and defense matures over the course of the week preceding and the week proceeding weaning. Thus, it is possible that experience from engaging in immature forms of play is needed to consolidate the nape as the playful target and for the development of the juvenile-typical pattern of defense. Two experiments were conducted to evaluate this possibility. For the first experiment, male rats were reared over the week post-weaning in either pairs or alone, and their play tested with unfamiliar partners when juveniles (31-34 days). For the second experiment, during the week preceding weaning, male and female rats were placed into one of three conditions: (1) with the mother and no peers, (2) with same-sex siblings but no mother or (3) with both the mother and same-sex siblings. The subjects were tested in same-sex, same-condition pairs when juveniles (31-34 days). Rats from all conditions, in both experiments, attacked the nape during play fighting and developed the same juvenile-typical patterns of playful defense. This suggests that the experience of peer-peer play in the peri-weaning period is not necessary for the development of the attack and defense components of juvenile-typical play.

Highlights

  • Play fighting in rats involves attack and defense of the nape

  • Comparison of play behavior in juveniles from wild rats and four strains of domesticated rats showed that play fighting in all these rats involved the attack and defense of the nape, and all use the same repertoire of defense tactics to defend the nape

  • The study on the effects of the strain of the attacker revealed an unexpected result: rats housed in mixed strain groups converged in their use of defensive tactics to ones that were intermediate between the two strains, and these altered preferences in defense remained the same irrespective of the strain of the attacker

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Summary

Introduction

Play fighting in rats involves attack and defense of the nape. To protect the nape, rats use a variety of defensive tactics, with different strains having specific preferences. It is possible that experience from engaging in immature forms of play is needed to consolidate the nape as the playful target and for the development of the juvenile-typical pattern of defense. Rats from all conditions, in both experiments, attacked the nape during play fighting and developed the same juvenile-typical patterns of playful defense. This suggests that the experience of peer-peer play in the peri-weaning period is not necessary for the development of the attack and defense components of juvenile-typical play. As little as seven days of exposure to partners from different strains in the week proceeding weaning is sufficient to change strain-typical preferences in use of defensive tactics. If peerpeer playful experiences are needed in order to develop strain-typical patterns of playful defense in the juvenile period, social isolates should exhibit strain-atypical playful defense as juveniles

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