Add The Health Site as a
Preferred Source
Add The Health Site as a Preferred Source

Early life stress may impact behaviour of this animal, says study

Stress impacts the behaviour in meerkat offsprings at an early age as maternal characteristics can have a profound influence on their children, suggests a new study.

Early life stress may impact behaviour of this animal, says study
The study showed that when their mothers feel stressed, it can alter the growth and behaviour in their daughters shutterstock

Written by Agencies |Published : February 26, 2019 8:26 AM IST

Stress impacts the behaviour in meerkat offsprings at an early age as maternal characteristics can have a profound influence on their children, suggests a new study.

The meerkat is a small carnivoran belonging to the mongoose family.

The study showed that when their mothers feel stressed, it can alter the growth and behaviour in their daughters in such a way that benefits the mothers at their child's expense, said lead author Ben Dantzer, Assistant Professor from the University of Michigan in the US.

Also Read

More News

Daughters from stressed meerkat mothers grow more slowly early in life. This reduces their future chances of reproducing on their own.

However, the practice is not applicable to sons.

Daughters from stressed mothers instead redirect their energy to rear the future siblings, which should directly benefit their mothers.

"Because early life growth or body mass in daughters is a major determinant of their future reproductive potential, our results highlight that early life stress should reduce the future reproductive success of daughters," said Dantzer.

For the study, the team from the varsity tested how glucocorticoids -- stress hormones -- of pregnant females affected the growth and cooperative behaviour of offspring.

Seven meerkat groups that produced 26 litters were observed across three years.

Some pregnant mothers were given cortisol -- glucocorticoid class of hormones -- which did not affect the pups' survival rates.

When the pups' weight and behaviour were tracked, the daughters, whose mothers were treated with cortisol, grew slowly. However, they were more willing to help raise other pups produced by their mother in the future, findings showed published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

It is an interesting possibility that the social group structure of humans -- where older siblings may babysit and feed their younger siblings -- is similar as in meerkats, Dantzer noted.

Add The HealthSite as a Preferred Source Add The Health Site as a Preferred Source

Source: IANS

About the Author

Agencies

... Read More