AI Article Synopsis

  • Coping styles in animals, shaped by stress responses, affect individual fitness and life history strategies.
  • Domestication led to animals with reduced aggression and HPA axis reactivity, promoting docility and energy efficiency.
  • However, while domestication reduces HPA activity, reactive coping styles may still exhibit strong HPA responses, indicating that fearfulness and coping behavior are independent aspects of animal responses.

Article Abstract

Coping styles in response to stressors have been described both in humans and in other animal species. Because coping styles are directly related to individual fitness they are part of the life history strategy. Behavioral styles trade off with other life-history traits through the acquisition and allocation of resources. Domestication and subsequent artificial selection for production traits specifically focused on selection of individuals with energy sparing mechanisms for non-production traits. Domestication resulted in animals with low levels of aggression and activity, and a low hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis reactivity. In the present work, we propose that, , selection for improved production efficiency may to some extent continue to favor docile domesticated phenotypes. It is hypothesized that both domestication and selection for improved production efficiency may result in the selection of reactive style animals. Both domesticated and reactive style animals are characterized by low levels of aggression and activity, and increased serotonin neurotransmitter levels. However, whereas domestication quite consistently results in a decrease in the functional state of the HPA axis, the reactive coping style is often found to be dominated by a HPA response. This may suggest that fearfulness and coping behavior are two independent underlying dimensions to the coping response. Although it is generally proposed that animal welfare improves with selection for calmer animals that are less fearful and reactive to novelty, animals bred to be less sensitive with fewer desires may be undesirable from an ethical point of view.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5624995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2017.00134DOI Listing

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