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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
61

Comportamento alimentar de codornas poedeiras (Coturnix coturnix Japonica) recebendo rações com diferentes micotoxinas / Alimentary behavior of quail layers (coturnix coturnix japonica) fed diets with different micotoxins

Alex Buragas 16 December 2005 (has links)
Este trabalho teve como objetivos principais: avaliar o comportamento alimentar em rações contendo zearalenona e aflatoxina; verificar a capacidade das aves em distinguir uma ração contendo micotoxina de uma ração isenta de contaminação; observar se as aves eram capazes de selecionar uma determinada ração. Foram utilizadas, 80 codornas japonesas (Coturnix coturnix japonica) em pico de postura, num delineamento experimental de quadrado latino (4x4). Os 4 tratamentos utilizados foram: controle (T1); controle + 0,1% adsorvente (T2); 2 mg/kg aflatoxinas + 4 mg/kg zearalenona (T3) e 2mg/kg aflatoxinas + 4 mg/kg zearalenona + 0,1% adsorvente (T4), em 4 posições pré-estabelecidas. Com a finalidade de observar o comportamento das aves os comedouros foram trocados de posição a cada 7 dias. Foi observada redução no consumo de ração (p<0,05) nos tratamentos que continham 2 mg/kg de aflatoxina e zearalenona com e sem adsorvente . As aves mostraram reconhecer a ração contaminada, tendo um maior consumo da ração livre de toxinas / The aim of this experiment was: analise alimentary behavior in diets with zearalenon and aflatoxin; observe poultry abilitys to discern from diets with or with out micotoxins; to understand if quail were able to select a diet. 80 quail layers (Coturnix coturnix japonica) were used in a latin square design (4x4). The treatments were: control (T1); control + 0.1% adsorvent (T2); 2 mg/kg aflatoxin + 4 mg/kg zearalenon (T3) e 2mg/kg aflatoxin + 4 mg/kg zearalenon + 0.1% adsorvent (T4), in 4 different places. To observe animal behavior diets were changed of position every 7 seven days. There were differences (p<0,05) among treatments, with lower intake for diets with 2 mg/kg aflatoxin and zearalenon with or with out adsorvent. This study indicates that layers could recognize the contamined treatments, animal intake for free contamination diets were highest
62

Predicting Explorative Behavior by Level of Emotional Reactivity in Bobwhite Quail Neonates (Colinus virginianus)

Suarez, Michael 30 October 2012 (has links)
Tests of emotional reactivity have been used in a broad range of basic and applied research and have been primarily concerned with how rearing conditions, particularly environmental enrichment, can affect reactivity. However, assessment of how emotional reactivity can be altered during testing procedures and how it affects behaviors such as exploration is relatively uncommon. The present study assessed the explorative responses of Northern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus) neonates under conditions of either elevated or attenuated emotional reactivity during a maze task. Measures of emotional reactivity were compared with measures of exploration to determine their relationship with one another. Chicks that were highly emotionally reactive were generally less willing to explore during the maze task than chicks that were less emotionally reactive. Results indicate that levels of emotional reactivity and approach/avoidance motivation play a role in the speed and amount of exploration that is likely to occur in novel environments.
63

The Effects of Sodium Flouride on the Reproductive Performance of the Male American kestrel (Falco sparverius) and the Japanese quail (Cotumix japonica)

Shutt, Laird January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
64

Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) breeding season calling behavior and roost site selection in a working agricultural landscape in Clay County, Mississippi

Lappin, Olivia A 12 May 2023 (has links) (PDF)
Research on northern bobwhite calling behavior and roosting ecology during the breeding season has received limited attention. However, variability in calling rate in response to conspecifics and environmental factors may affect avian monitoring strategies. We conducted 10-minute breeding season surveys (April-August) on B. Bryan Farms, Mississippi, from 2021-2022 to evaluate the impact of conspecifics and environmental covariates on male bobwhite calling rate. We observed a positive linear effect of conspecifics and temperature on calling rate. We did not find sufficient evidence to support a relationship between calling rate and cloud cover or barometric pressure. We also analyzed breeding season third-order roost site selection and found selection against bare ground and a quadratic relationship with litter and average vegetation height during roosting activity. It is also important for managers to consider all conditions of the environment and habitat requirements during every season for population persistence, including breeding season roost cover.
65

Social Influences on Mate Choice in Japanese Quail, Coturnix japonica / Social Influences on Mate Choice

White, David J. 08 1900 (has links)
Classical theories of how animals make mate choices have focused on each sex's inherited preferences for the other sex's traits or behaviours. The present thesis was undertaken to investigate how social factors play a role in determining an animal's choice of mate. In the series of experiments reported here, 'focal' female and male Japanese quail were given the opportunity to observe another quail (a 'model') of the same sex mating with a conspecific of the opposite sex (a 'target'). Results of experiments described in chapters 2 and 3 revealed that focal females: (1) displayed an increased tendency to affiliate with male targets that they had observed mating with model females, and (2) found a target male more attractive if he had been observed just standing near another female. In Chapter 4, social influences or male mate choice were investigated. Focal males: (1) exhibited a decrease in their preference for female targets that they had observed mating with model males, and (2) showed a decrease in preference for a female target only if she had been seen mating with or being courted by a model male, not simply standing near him. Finally, in chapter 5, it was determined that for quail of both sexes, affiliation time was a reliable predictor of focal subjects' actual choice of a mate. Taken together, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that females gain benefits from attending to the mate choices of other females, whereas for males there is a cost associated with mating with a female that had recently muted with another male. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
66

Effects of exogenous and endogenous factors on appetite regulation in broiler chicks and Japanese quail

Halter, Bailey Anne 03 June 2021 (has links)
Understanding how appetite is regulated, via exogenous or endogenous factors, is essential to animal agriculture in order to maximize production capabilities, as well as in human medicine to generate ways to treat conditions such as eating disorders or obesity. The aim of this thesis was to evaluate the effects of ferulic acid (FA), an exogenous factor found within plant cells, and oxyntomodulin (OXM), an endogenous hormone generated in the gastrointestinal tract, on food intake in avian models, as well as elucidate the hypothalamic mechanisms responsible. In broiler chicks (Gallus gallus), FA administered peripherally (IP) resulted in a transient yet potent reduction of food intake. A behavior analysis revealed that FA-treated chicks defecated fewer times than control birds. Within the arcuate nucleus (ARC) there was an increase in c-Fos immunoreactivity, indicating neuronal activation, in FA-treated chicks. Within the hypothalamus, there was a decrease in mRNA abundance of galanin, ghrelin, melanocortin receptor 3, and pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC), however within the ARC there was a decrease in POMC and an increase in c-Fos mRNA after FA treatment. OXM, a proglucagon-derived peptide produced in the gastrointestinal tract, administered intracerebroventricularly (ICV) or IP in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica), resulted in a decrease in food intake for 3 hours post-injection. There was an increase in c-Fos immunoreactivity within the ARC as well as the dorsomedial nucleus (DMN) in quail ICV injected with OXM. In conclusion, these novel data provide insights on the similarities and differences between factors that can affect appetite regulation via anorexigenic effects. / Master of Science / Exogenous and endogenous factors affect appetite regulation. Exogenous factors originate in feed components, additives, and other environmental factors that can affect bodily functions but are derived from an external source. Endogenous factors are made within the body, such as hormones and neurotransmitters, usually in response to a stimulus, and serve to communicate signals both locally and distantly in the body. Ferulic acid (FA), a natural exogenous factor originating within plant cells, is found in commonly consumed plant-based foods. When administered peripherally into broiler chicks (meat-type birds), FA caused a direct and potent, yet quickly diminishing, decrease in food intake via activation of cells within the hypothalamus, the region of the brain that is responsible for appetite regulation. Oxyntomodulin (OXM), an endogenous peptide hormone generated within the gastrointestinal tract in response to the digestion of nutrients, is known to decrease food intake in humans, rodents, and the broiler chick. However, its effects in Japanese quail, a model closer to a "wild-type" bird, are unknown. Quail injected peripherally (outside the brain) or intracerebroventricularly (ICV; into lateral ventricle of brain) with OXM showed a reduction in food intake that was more persistent than FA's effects with the effects also mediated via activation within the hypothalamus, although through slightly different molecular mechanisms. Understanding different factors that can regulate appetite in animals is necessary for agricultural applications to maximize production and improve health and welfare, as well as in humans to elucidate methods to treat appetite-related conditions, such as eating disorders and obesity.
67

The Effects of Dietary Lipids on Bone Chemical, Mechanical and Histological Properties in Japanese Quail (Coturnix C. Japonica)

Liu, Dongmin 12 July 2000 (has links)
Japanese quail were used as animal models in four experiments to evaluate the effects of supplementing diets with different lipids on bone chemical, mechanical, and histological properties. In Exp. 1, laying hens were fed a basal diet containing either 5% soybean oil (SBO), hydrogenated soybean oil (HSBO), chicken fat (CF), or menhaden fish oil (FO). The addition of SBO in the maternal diet increased the levels of total n-6 fatty acids and arachidonic acid (AA, 20:4n-6) in yolk and tibial bones of newly hatched progeny (P<0.01), whereas the maternal FO diet elevated the concentrations of total n-3 fatty acids, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 22:5n-3), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n-3) and total saturated acid, but greatly decreased the amount of AA in both egg and progeny tibiae (P<0.01). The maternal HSBO diet resulted in the accumulation of trans-18:1 fatty acid in egg yolks and tibiae at hatch. The addition of FO or HSBO to the maternal diet significantly lowered the ex vivo PGE2 production of tibiae in newly hatched quail compared to those from hens given the SBO or CF diets (P<0.01). In Exp. 2, the addition of different lipids in the maternal diets did not affect growth, tibial length, diameter or collagen content of the progeny. However, supplementing the maternal diet with 5 % FO or HSBO increased the percent bone ash , increased bone pyridinium crosslinks of collagen, enlarged the cartilaginous proliferative and hypertrophied zones, increased diaphyseal cortical thickness of the tibiae in embryos (P<0.05), and subsequently increased tibial shear force, stiffness (P<0.05) and improved cortical thickness, density and trabecular density in early growth and development of progeny compared to those from hens consuming the SBO or CF diets (P<0.05). In Exp. 3, male quail at one month of age were fed a basal diet containing either 5% SBO, HSBO, CF or FO for seven months. Long-term supplementation in the diets of different lipids did not affect body weight, food intake, tibial length or diameter, but the FO group had the highest tibial percent ash, and both FO and HSBO increased tibial mineral content in aged quail compared to those fed the SBO or CF diets (P<0.05). At 8 months of age, quail fed FO had the highest concentrations of (n-3) fatty acids (20:5n-3, 22:5n-3, 22:6n-3) but the lowest amounts of 20:4n-6 in lipids from tibial cortical bone, whereas the SBO and CF diets greatly elevated (n-6) fatty acids and 20:4n-6 levels. The HSBO diet which contains t18:1 fatty acid resulted in t18:1 accumulation in bone. Long-term supplementation with FO or HSBO increased tibial shear force, stiffness and shear stress, as well as improved cortical thickness and density compared with the SBO or CF diets ( P<.05). In Exp. 4, the addition of SBO or CF to the diet for seven months decreased tibial mineral content compared to the FO diet (P<0.05). Quail fed SBO increased collagen concentration in the tibiae (P<0.05), but the level of collagen crosslinks was higher in quail fed FO or HSBO compared to those given the SBO or CF diets (P<0.05). The PGE2 production in bone organ culture and marrow was greatly increased in quail maintained on the SBO or CF diets (P<0.05). PGE2 production in the bone microenvironment was negatively correlated with the tibial percent ash and collagen crosslinks but had a positive correlation with tibial collagen concentration. The results of these studies demonstrate that either supplementing the maternal diets with or long-term exposure to different lipids alters the chemical composition and metabolism of skeletal tissue in both embryos and aged quail. Maternal dietary SBO or CF had an adverse effect on bone growth and development in embryos. Likewise, long-term exposure to SBO or CF diet impaired bone metabolism and remodeling. In contrast, the FO or HSBO diet had beneficial effects on bone modeling in embryos and remodeling in adult quail. / Ph. D.
68

An epigenetic theory of hemispheric specialization: the role of prenatal sensori-motor experience in the development of turning bias and spatial orientation in bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus)

Casey, Michael Bernard 26 October 2005 (has links)
This study examined the effects of prenatal sensory and motor experience on the development of spatial orientation and turning bias in bobwhite quail. The theory presented here describes hemispheric specialization as the result of probabilistic events in the developing organism's prenatal environment; in particular, activity and experience in the final stages of prenatal development appear critical. Models and definitions of behavioral asymmetry, hemispheric specialization, and structural lateralization are reviewed. The results of Experiment 1 revealed a left-side turning bias in 85% of unmanipulated chicks. Experiments 2, 3, and 4 demonstrated that prenatal visual experience is a significant facilitator of population level left-side turning biases in bobwhite quail chicks. Experiment 5 investigated a potential underlying neurological basis for the bobwhite turning bias with unilateral injections of cycloheximide. The results of Experiment 5 suggest a left hemispheric specialization for the left-side turning bias. Furthermore, the results of Experiments 2 and 3 suggest that the asymmetrical hatching behaviors of the bobwhite quail are also a significant canalizing influence on the development of turning bias. The findings of this study are discussed in terms of an epigenetic theory of the development of hemispheric specialization and questions are raised as to the efficacy of laterality indexes as a reliable quantification of degree of hemispheric lateralization. / Ph. D.
69

Polychlorinated biphenyl effects on avian hepatic enzyme induction and thyroid function

Webb, Catherine Marie 19 September 2006 (has links)
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) decrease thyroid function in rats and mice by inducing activity of a liver enzyme, uridine diphosphate-glucuronosyltransferase (UDP-GT), thereby increasing thyroxine (T4) clearance. This loss of T4 can lead to hypothyroidism. In this study, an assay was validated for measuring UDP-GT activity toward T4 in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica). Then UDP-GT induction by Aroclor 1254 was evaluated in quail, and quail and mice were compared in their responses to Aroclor 1254. In Experiment 1, Japanese quail and Balb/c mice were dosed orally with vehicle or Aroclor 1254 (250 or 500 mg/kg) and sacrificed five days later. In Experiment 2, Japanese quail were dosed orally with vehicle or Aroclor 1254 (500 mg/kg) and sacrificed either five or 21 days later. Total liver UDP-GT capacity increased with Aroclor 1254 exposure in all treatment groups of both species. Enzyme induction led to a trend to decreased plasma T4 concentrations at both doses and exposure times in quail and significantly decreased plasma T4 concentrations at both doses in mice. PCBs altered thyroid function in quail, but they did not become hypothyroid. This was in contrast to mice, which did become hypothyroid. It is unclear how PCBs affect the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid (HPT) axis in quail, and activation of the HPT axis appears to be inhibited in mice. Overall, quail showed a lesser response than mice to equivalent doses of Aroclor 1254, so it appears that birds may be less vulnerable to PCBs than mammals. / Master of Science
70

The effects of different iodine availabilities on thyroid function during development in Japanese quail

Stallard, Lana C. 13 October 2010 (has links)
Day 14 embryos (16.5-17 day incubation period) and 1 day old chicks of Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) were used to study the effects of different egg iodine (I) availabilities on thyroid function during development. Low (≤50 μgI/kg feed in the maternal diet) and high (1200 μgl/kg feed) I availability were compared to control levels (800 μgI/kg feed). Thyroid gland (TG) content of I, triiodothyronine (T3), and thyroxine (T4), plasma concentrations of T3 and T4, and hepatic 5’ monodeiodinase (5’-D) activity was measured, and the response of the TG to thyrotropin (TSH) stimulation [TG-cAMP content and plasma thyroid hormone (TH) concentrations]. Also, the developmental patterns of TH concentrations in the TG and plasma were determined. With increased I availability, TG-I content is elevated but thyroidal T4 and T3 and the developmental pattern of TG-TH were not different from controls. Plasma T3 and T4 and the developmental pattern of plasma TH were not altered. Indicators of the TG response to TSH stimulation were not different with increased I availability. Hepatic 5’-D activity did not differ between control and high I availability. Reduced body weight was associated with increased I availability. In general, TG weight was not altered, but a small percentage of the high I birds exhibited TG hypertrophy and altered TG function. With low I availability, TG-I content was reduced. Although thyroidal T4 content was reduced on embryonic day 14 and thereafter, TG-T3 was maintained throughout development. The magnitude of the TG response to TSH stimulation was not altered with reduced I availability. Hepatic 5’-D activity, plasma TH concentrations and the developmental patterns of plasma TH were not different between control and low I availability. Reduced I availability did not affect body or TG weight. Developing Japanese quail exhibit excellent ability to adjust thyroid function over a wide range of I availabilities. Regulation appears to occur at TH synthesis which allows most aspects of thyroid dynamics to remain unchanged in the maintenance of circulating TH concentrations. / Master of Science

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