Iq. Whishaw et al., On the reduction of dodging in mice: A comparison of food wrenching and dodging in rats (Rattus norvegicus) and mice (Mus musculus), J COM PSYCH, 112(4), 1998, pp. 383-388
dRats attempt to steal food from conspecifics by approaching them from the
side to wrench the food from the victims' paws, but victims dodge laterally
away to protect their food. Given the pervasive necessity of obtaining foo
d, it might be expected that the behaviors of food wrenching and dodging wo
uld be common to many animals, but this idea has not been examined. In the
present study, food wrenching and dodging were compared in Long-Evans and S
prague-Dawley rats (Rattus norvegicus) and out-crossed CDF1 and inbred C57b
mice (Mus musculus). Mice stole food using a strategy very similar to that
of rats, but they did not dodge in an open field test and dodged less in a
home cage test and ran away or fought more than rats. There were no strain
differences in rats, but C57b mice dodged less than CDF1 mice. Given that
dodging is a component not only of food defensive behavior but also of play
, sexual, and aggressive behavior, the species and strain difference may be
a marker (or a key element) of changes in social behaviors that have occur
red since the evolutionary separation of rats and mice.