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Voluntary exercise at the expense of reproductive success in Djungarian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus)

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Abstract

Energy demands of gestation and lactation represent a severe challenge for small mammals. Therefore, additional energetic burdens may compromise successful breeding. In small rodents, food restriction, cold exposure (also in combination) and wheel running to obtain food have been shown to diminish reproductive outcome. Although exhibited responses such as lower incidence of pregnancy, extended lactation periods and maternal infanticide were species dependent, their common function is to adjust energetic costs to the metabolic state reflecting the trade-off between maternal investment and self-maintenance. In the present study, we sought to examine whether voluntary exercise affects reproduction in Djungarian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus), which are known for their high motivation to run in a wheel. Voluntary exercise resulted in two different effects on reproduction; in addition to increased infanticide and cannibalism, which was evident across all experiments, the results of one experiment provided evidence that free access to a running wheel may prevent successful pregnancy. It seems likely that the impact of voluntary wheel running on reproduction was associated with a reduction of internal energy resources evoked by extensive exercise. Since the hamsters were neither food-restricted nor forced to run in the present study, an energetic deficit as reason for infanticide in exercising dams would emphasise the particularly high motivation to run in a wheel.

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Acknowledgments

We are grateful to Lena Strehlke and Steffanie Ullmann for their extensive help in performing the third experiment. We also thank Dr. Esther Lipokatic-Takacs, Siegried Hilken, Marianne Bruening and Tobias Gronau for assistance in animal care and body weight determination. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for helpful comments.

All experiments were in accordance with the German Animal Welfare Act and approved by the district government of Lower Saxony (Ref. No. 09/1739).

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The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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Correspondence to Ines Petri.

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Ines Petri and Frank Scherbarth contributed equally to this work.

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Petri, I., Scherbarth, F. & Steinlechner, S. Voluntary exercise at the expense of reproductive success in Djungarian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus). Naturwissenschaften 97, 837–843 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-010-0701-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-010-0701-z

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