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2012 | 68 | 07 |
Tytuł artykułu

Stereotypie - rozwój i skutki występowania

Warianty tytułu
EN
Stereotypies: Development and effects
Języki publikacji
PL
Abstrakty
EN
The occurrence of stereotypies in animals is primarily related to (i) internal states induced by the captive environment or other external stimuli that continuously trigger or motivate specific behaviours, (ii) situations in which the environment causes a state of chronic stress that influences the path from the cortex to the basal ganglia promoting and sequencing a behaviour that results in a lack of proper inhibition and (iii) an experience in early ontogeny that influenced the development of the central nervous system, causing inappropriate sequencing and a lack of inhibition with effects visible even in adult life. Such features of stereotypic behaviour as its repetitiveness, a gradual loss of variability and increasing predictability might be related to positively reinforcing opioid effect, environment predictability or synaptic priming. Consequences of stereotypies are various and depend on their causes and the types of stereotypic movements. They might influence the physical state of the animal, handicapping its social interactions, but also decrease anxiety and ability to react to external stimuli. Stereotypies and their consequences are strictly related with other welfare indicators and are unequivocally treated as a symptom of abnormality.
Wydawca
-
Rocznik
Tom
68
Numer
07
Opis fizyczny
s.402-405,bibliogr.
Twórcy
autor
  • Katedra Biologii Ewolucyjnej i Ekologii, Uniwersytet Wrocławski, ul.Sienkiewicza 20, 50-325 Wrocław
autor
autor
autor
Bibliografia
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  • 2.Bergeron R., Badnell-Waters A. J., Lambton S., Mason G.: Stereotypic oral behaviour in captive ungulates: foraging, diet and gastrointestinal function, [w:] Mason G., Rushen J. (red.): Stereotypic Animal Behaviour/Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 2006, 19-57.
  • 3.Boorer M.: Some aspects of stereotyped patterns of movement exibited by zoo animals. Int. Zoo. Yearb. 1973, 12, 164-168.
  • 4.Cabib S.: The neurobiology of stereotypy II: the role of stress, [w:] Mason G., Rushen J. (red.): Stereotypic Animal Behaviour: Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 2006, 227-255.
  • 5.Clubb R., Vickery S.: Locomotory stereotypies in carnivores: does pacing stem from hunting, ranging or frustrated escape? [w:] Mason G., Rushen J. (red.): Stereotypic Animal Behaviour: Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 2006, 58-85.
  • 6.Cooper J. J., McDonald L., Mills D. S.: The effect of increasing visual horizons on stereotypic weaving: implications for the social housing of stabled horses. Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 2000, 69, 67-83.
  • 7.Cooper J. J., Nicol C. J.: Stereotypic behaviour affects environmental preference in bank voles, Clethrionomys glareolus. Anim. Behav. 1991, 41, 971-977.
  • 8.Cooper J. J., Nicol C. J.: The "coping" hypothesis of stereotypic behaviour: a reply to Rushen. Anim. Behav. 1993, 45, 616-618.
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  • 10.Ganszczyk K.: Zachowania samouszkadzające o podłożu psychogennym u zwierząt - analiza przyczyn w kontekście możliwości leczenia. Życie Wet. 2010, 85, 674-679.
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  • 12.Harris K. M., Mahone E. M., Singer H. S.: Nonautistic motor stereotypies: clinical features and longitudinal follow-up. Pediatr. Neurol. 2008, 38, 267-272.
  • 13.Haspeslagh M., Dewulf J., Kalmar I. D., Moons C.: Foot problems, stereotypies and substrate type in Asian elephants: a European survey. Rep. on the 12th BIAZA Ann. Symp. on Zoo Research, Chester Zoo, 7th-8th July 2010. BIAZA Research Newsletter 2010, 11, 3.
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  • 15.Hill S. P., Wehnelt S., Sanderson S., Holmes E., Rowlands T.: Changes in behaviour of a spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus) following dental treatment, [w:] Hiddinga B. (red.): Proc. EAZA Conference, Bristol 6-10 September 2005, 229-230.
  • 16.Kaleta T.: Zachowania stereotypowe - charakterystyka i rola w dobrostanie zwierztą. Życie Wet. 2003, 78, 266-270.
  • 17.Kiley-Worthington M.: Animals in Circuses and Zoos: Chirons World? Little Eco-Farms Publishing, Essex 1995.
  • 18.Laidlaw R., Lefebvre L., Poulsen E., Zimmermann D.: Status of bear welfare at Chief Saunooke Bear Park, Cherokee Bear Zoo, and Santa's Land, in Cherokee, North Carolina. An investigate report of Chief Saunooke Bear Park, Cherokee Bear Zoo and Santa's Land. PETA, Norfolk, Virginia, USA 2010.
  • 19.Lutz C., Well A., Novak M.: Stereotypic and self-injurious behavior in rhesus macaques: a survey and retrospective analysis of environment and early experience. Am. J. Primatol. 2003, 60, 1-15.
  • 20.Mason G.: A decade-or-more's progress in understanding stereotypic behaviour, [w:] Mason G., Rushen J. (red.): Stereotypic Animal Behaviour: Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 2006, 1-18.
  • 21.Mason G.: Stereotypies: a critical review. Anim. Behav. 1991, 41, 1015-1037.
  • 22.Mason G., Clubb R., Latham N., Vickery S.: Why and how should we use environmental enrichment to tackle stereotypic behaviour? Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 2007, 102, 163-188.
  • 23.Mason G., Latham N.: Can't stop, won't stop: is stereotypy a reliable animal welfare indicator? Anim. Welfare (Suppl.) 2004, 13, 57-69.
  • 24.Mason G., Rushen J.: Stereotypic Animal Behaviour: Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 2006.
  • 25.Maślak R., Sergiel A., Hill S. P.: Some aspects of locomotory stereotypies in spectacled bears (Tremarctos ornatus) and changes in behaviour following dental treatment. W przygotowaniu.
  • 26.McAfee L. M., Mills D. S., Cooper J. J.: The use of mirrors for the control of stereotypic weaving behaviour in the stabled horse. Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 2002, 78, 159-173.
  • 27.McBride S. D., Hemmings A.: Altered mesoaccumbens and nigro-stratial dopamine physiology is associated with stereotypy development in a non-rodent species. Behav. Brain Res. 2005, 159, 113-118.
  • 28.Morris D.: The response of animals to a restricted environment, [w:] Morris D. (red.): Patterns of Reproductive Behaviour. Jonathan Cape Thirty, Bedford Square, London 1970, 490-511.
  • 29.Novak M. A., Meyer J. S., Lutz C., Tiefenbacher S.: Deprived environments: developmental insights from primatology, [w:] Mason G., Rushen J. (red.): Stereotypic Animal Behaviour: Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 2006, 153-189.
  • 30.Rees P. A.: Low environmental temperature causes an increase in stereotypic behaviour in captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). J. Thermal Biol. 2004, 29, 37-43.
  • 31.Rushen J.: The "coping" hypothesis of stereotypic behaviour. Anim. Behav. 1993, 45, 613-615.
  • 32.Schoenecker B.: Increased survival and reproductive success associated with stereotypical behaviours in laboratory-bred bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 2009, 121, 55-62.
  • 33.Seidensticker J., Doherty J. G.: Integrating animal behavior and exhibit design, [w:] Kleiman D. G., Allen M. E., Thompson K. V., Lumpkin S. (red.): Wild Mammals in Captivity/Principles and Techniques. The University of Chicago Press 1997, 180-190.
  • 34.Sergiel A., Maślak R., Kusznierz J., Paśko Ł.: Zachowania stereotypowe - przegląd definicji i klasyfikacji. Med. Weter. 2012, 68, 45-48.
  • 35.Terlouw E. M. C., Lawrence A. B., Illius A. W.: Influences of feeding level and physical restriction on development of sterotypies in sows. Anim. Behav. 1991, 42, 981-991.
  • 36.Toates F.: Stereotypies, [w:] Toates F. (red.): Stress/Conceptual and Biological Aspects. John Wiley&Sons, Baffins Lane, Chichester 1995, 215-151.
  • 37.Vickery S., Mason G.: Understanding stereotypies in captive bears: the first step towards treatment. Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Symposium on Zoo Research, Marwell Zoological Park, Winchester, UK 2003, 38-51.
  • 38.Webster J.: Animal Welfare: Limping Towards Eden. Blackwell Publishing Ltd., Oxford 2005.
  • 39.Wechsler B.: Coping and coping strategies: a behavioural view. Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 1995, 43, 123-134.
  • 40.Wechsler B.: Stereotypies in polar bears. Zoo Biol. 1991, 10, 177-188.
  • 41.Wemelsfelder F.: The concept of animal boredom and its relationship to stereotyped behaviour, [w:] Lawrence A. B., Rushen J. (red.): Stereotypic Animal Behaviour/Fundamentals and Applications to Welfare. CAB International, Wallingford 1993, 65-95.
  • 42.Wenker C. J., Müller M., Berger M., Heiniger S., Neiger-Aeschbacher G., Schawalder P., Lussi A.: Dental Health Status and Endodontic Treatment of Captive Brown Bears (Ursus arctos spp.) Living in the Bernese Bear Pit. J. Vet. Dent. 1998, 15, 27-34.
  • 43.Wilson M. L., Bloomsmith M., Maple T.: Stereotypic swaying and serum cortisol concetrations in three captive African elephants (Loxodonta africana). Anim. Welfare 2004, 13, 39-43.
  • 44.Zanella A. J., Broom D., Hunter J. C., Mendl M. T.: Brain opioid receptors in relation to stereotypies, inactivity, and housing in sows. Physiol. Behav. 1996, 59, 769-775.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikatory
Identyfikator YADDA
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