Abstract
Hypothermia is considered a major risk factor increasing kit mortality in farmed mink. We studied the effects of reheating chilled mink kits. From each of 27 litters, three 1-day-old kits were exposed to one of three treatments: (i) chilling and reheating in a farm incubator (INCU), (ii) chilling and reheating in home nest (HOME), and (iii) control, remained in nest (NEST). During cold exposure (8 °C) mink kits were active in average 67% of the time before they turned inactive; the latency until inactivity averaged 12.3 (0.8) min. We suggest that kit behaviour during early cooling may function to increase chances of eliciting maternal care, and we found that duration of kit activity increased with body weight in 1-day-old kits ( P < 0.001). In addition, the most active kits had a shorter latency of coming inactive ( P = 0.002), suggesting that the behaviour is energy costly. The kit mortality was low (5 out of 81), making statistical analysis of mortality infeasible. We found no treatment effects on weight gain over 7 days. We did not find any additional effect of the traditional incubator used in reheating chilled 1-day-old mink kits, as the dam in the home nest appeared as efficient to reheat a small chilled kit.
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