Vocalisations as a potential indicator of parturition in C57BL/6J mice
Sara Capas-Peneda, Ana Ferreira, Colin Gilbert, Jan-Bas Prins, Ashley Vanderplank, Giorgio Rosati, Marco Garzola, Ingrid Anna Sofia Olsson, Gabriela Munhoz Morello

TL;DR
This study explores how mouse vocalizations during birth can help improve breeding management in lab settings.
Contribution
The study shows that vocalizations during parturition can be used for automated detection in mice.
Findings
Vocalizations were detected during parturition in both single and pair-housed mice.
Vocalizations decreased after parturition and were minimal before it, except for ultrasonic sounds in pair-housed mice.
The study supports using vocalizations as a basis for automated parturition detection in HCM systems.
Abstract
Breeding management in laboratory rodents is challenging, particularly around parturition and the neonatal period, where cage disturbance is often avoided in an attempt to limit neonatal mortality. Nevertheless, cage-side observations and single daily checks frequently underestimate pup numbers born and miss parturition complications. Home Cage Monitoring (HCM) systems are gaining popularity in animal facilities, detecting critical events such as food availability and activity levels. Parturition is a complex event involving specific patterns of behaviour, activity and vocalisations. In this study, audio and video data were collected from parturition events of single-housed C57BL/6J females and breeding pairs housed in a prototype rack with integrated microphones. Vocalisations were detected during parturition in both housing conditions, with minimal vocalisations observed prior to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroendocrine regulation and behavior · Reproductive System and Pregnancy · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
