reproductive experience
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2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jodie E. Pestana ◽  
Tayla B. McCutcheon ◽  
Sylvia K. Harmon-Jones ◽  
Rick Richardson ◽  
Bronwyn M. Graham

Reproductive experience leads to long-lasting changes in anxiety-like behaviour and fear extinction, the laboratory model of exposure therapy for anxiety disorders. For example, fear extinction is influenced by estrous cycle in nulliparous (no reproductive experience) female rats, but this effect is abolished in primiparous (one reproductive experience) females. It is unclear whether such changes are driven by pregnancy, maternal experience of caring for offspring during the postpartum period, or a combination of both experiences. The present study sought to determine the influence of maternal experience (i.e., exposure to pups and mother-pup interactions) on fear extinction in primiparous rats. In Experiment 1, we tested whether pup exposure is necessary to mitigate estrous effects on fear extinction in primiparous rats. Age-matched nulliparous rats, primiparous rats, and primiparous rats who experienced pregnancy but not pup exposure, underwent fear conditioning on day 1 (2 months post-parturition), extinction training during proestrus (high sex hormones) or metestrus (low sex hormones) on day 2, and extinction recall on day 3. Replicating past research, nulliparous rats showed impaired extinction recall when they were extinguished during metestrus compared to proestrus. In contrast, primiparous rats with and without pup exposure showed comparable extinction recall irrespective of estrous phase. In Experiment 2, we assessed whether naturally-occurring variation in mother-pup interactions predict future fear extinction performance and anxiety-like behaviour. During the first week of lactation, primiparous rats were measured for maternal behaviours toward pups. Primiparous rats were then tested on the light-dark box and elevated plus maze to measure anxiety-like behaviour and underwent a fear extinction protocol 1 month post-weaning. We found no significant correlations between maternal behaviour and fear extinction outcomes or anxiety-like behaviour. Our findings suggest that pregnancy, not maternal experience, mitigates the impact of estrous cycle on fear extinction. In addition, natural variation in maternal experience does not appear to contribute to variability in future fear extinction outcomes or anxiety-like behaviour in primiparous rats.


Author(s):  
Aleksandra Górecka-Bruzda ◽  
Joanna Jaworska ◽  
Marta Siemieniuch ◽  
Zbigniew Jaworski ◽  
Christina R. Stanley ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 288 (1948) ◽  
Author(s):  
Camilla Wikenros ◽  
Morgane Gicquel ◽  
Barbara Zimmermann ◽  
Øystein Flagstad ◽  
Mikael Åkesson

Age at first reproduction constitutes a key life-history trait in animals and is evolutionarily shaped by fitness benefits and costs of delayed versus early reproduction. The understanding of how intrinsic and extrinsic changes affects age at first reproduction is crucial for conservation and management of threatened species because of its demographic effects on population growth and generation time. For a period of 40 years in the Scandinavian wolf ( Canis lupus ) population, including the recolonization phase, we estimated age at first successful reproduction (pup survival to at least three weeks of age) and examined how the variation among individuals was explained by sex, population size (from 1 to 74 packs), primiparous or multiparous origin, reproductive experience of the partner and inbreeding. Median age at first reproduction was 3 years for females ( n = 60) and 2 years for males ( n = 74), and ranged between 1 and 8–10 years of age ( n = 297). Female age at first reproduction decreased with increasing population size, and increased with higher levels of inbreeding. The probability for males to reproduce later first decreased, reaching its minimum when the number of territories approached 40–60, and then increased with increasing population size. Inbreeding for males and reproductive experience of parents and partners for both sexes had overall weak effects on age at first reproduction. These results allow for more accurate parameter estimates when modelling population dynamics for management and conservation of small and vulnerable wolf populations, and show how humans through legal harvest and illegal hunting influence an important life-history trait like age at first reproduction.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 650-654
Author(s):  
Madison Bunderson ◽  
David Diaz ◽  
Angela Maupin ◽  
Nicole Landi ◽  
Marc N. Potenza ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 1065-1072 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie C Edwards ◽  
Tanya T Shoot ◽  
R Jeffrey Martin ◽  
David F Sherry ◽  
Susan D Healy

Abstract There are numerous observational studies on intraspecific variation in avian nest building and a single experimental manipulation. The general consensus is that birds build nests in response to environmental conditions, but it is not clear whether such flexibility in nest building is reproductively advantageous. To test the relationship between building flexibility and reproductive success, we allowed captive zebra finches to build their first nest, using string, and to breed in temperature-controlled rooms held at 14 or 30 °C. Once the offspring had fledged, we returned half the pairs to breed at the same temperature while half the pairs were switched to the alternative temperature. We provided all pairs with string and left them to build and breed a second time. For their first nest, pairs that built at 14 °C used more string than did pairs that built at 30 °C, and pairs that bred successfully built a nest with more string than did unsuccessful pairs. When pairs built their second nest, however, temperature no longer explained the number of pieces of string they used; rather, irrespective of the ambient temperature, pairs that had successfully produced young from their first nest used the same amount of string for their second nest, whereas those that had failed to reproduce with their first nest used more string. These latter pairs were then more likely to reproduce successfully. Ambient temperature, therefore, did affect the nest the pairs built but only in the absence of reproductive experience.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-52
Author(s):  
Holly Runde

If abortion as a reproductive experience continues to retain a certain 'unspeakability' that keeps it on the margins of culture, the expression of grief or mourning in its wake remains even more inexpressible; to voluntarily terminate a pregnancy, no matter how fraught the circumstances, would seem to require the forfeiture of a right to acknowledge any resulting psychic loss. In her 1993 novel Journal d'Hannah, Louise Lambrichs gives us the 'diary' of a woman whose late-term abortion during WWII results in sterility. In mourning, Hannah creates an interior dream world in her diary in which her aborted daughter grows up in real time, as she remains unable to vocalize the pain of her loss to the exterior world. In this article, I explore the novel's capacity to push our understanding of what kinds of 'parental' mourning are acceptable and representable, and the ways in which the narrative confronts the lack of a broader cultural language with which to address this specific kind of grief.<br/> This article grounds its examination of Hannah's interiorized grief in theoretical notions of the unspeakability of trauma and feminist definitions of bodily integrity in the imaginary domain. I situate Lambrichs's work not as an anti-feminist indictment of abortion, as some have understood it, but as a challenge to open up a discursive space that enables an empathetic understanding of the diverse ways in which women deal with the voluntary termination of a pregnancy. Drawing on Barbara Johnson's (1986) exploration of the poetics of loss and abortion, I argue that the vocalization of post-abortion mourning need not result in the conclusion that taking 'the woman's feelings of guilt and loss into consideration... is to deny the right to choose the act that produced them' (33). The novel does not 'resolve' the tension of the confusing liminal space between life and death that abortion creates, but rather works to confront this liminality head on in a way that serves to question the limits of the ethics of parental mourning.


Endocrinology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 160 (12) ◽  
pp. 2903-2917 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pryscila D S Teixeira ◽  
Angela M Ramos-Lobo ◽  
Isadora C Furigo ◽  
Jose Donato

Abstract Several metabolic and behavioral adaptations that emerge during pregnancy remain present after weaning. Thus, reproductive experience causes long-lasting metabolic programming, particularly in the brain. However, the isolate effects of pregnancy or lactation and the molecular mechanisms involved in these long-term modifications are currently unknown. In the current study, we investigated the role of brain signal transducer and activator of transcription-5 (STAT5), a key transcription factor recruited by hormones highly secreted during gestation or lactation, for the long-term adaptations induced by reproductive experience. In control mice, pregnancy followed by lactation led to increased body adiposity and reduced ambulatory activity later in life. Additionally, pregnancy+lactation induced long-term epigenetic modifications in the brain: we observed upregulation in hypothalamic expression of histone deacetylases and reduced numbers of neurons with histone H3 acetylation in the paraventricular, arcuate, and ventromedial nuclei. Remarkably, brain-specific STAT5 ablation prevented all metabolic and epigenetic changes observed in reproductively experienced control female mice. Nonetheless, brain-specific STAT5 knockout (KO) mice that had the experience of pregnancy but did not lactate showed increased body weight and reduced energy expenditure later in life, whereas pregnancy KO and pregnancy+lactation KO mice exhibited improved insulin sensitivity compared with virgin KO mice. In summary, lactation is necessary for the long-lasting metabolic effects observed in reproductively experienced female mice. In addition, epigenetic mechanisms involving histone acetylation in neuronal populations related to energy balance regulation are possibly associated with these long-term consequences. Finally, our findings highlighted the key role played by brain STAT5 signaling for the chronic metabolic and epigenetic changes induced by pregnancy and lactation.


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