Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory

Brain size reduction is a common trait in domesticated species when compared to wild conspecifics. This reduction can happen through changes in individual brain regions as a response to selection on specific behaviours. We selected red junglefowl for 10 generations for diverging levels of fear towar...

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Main Authors: Rebecca Katajamaa, Per Jensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2020-08-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.200628
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spelling doaj-86deda610c7b4a50a95ab955702cae8b2020-11-25T04:10:32ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032020-08-017810.1098/rsos.200628200628Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memoryRebecca KatajamaaPer JensenBrain size reduction is a common trait in domesticated species when compared to wild conspecifics. This reduction can happen through changes in individual brain regions as a response to selection on specific behaviours. We selected red junglefowl for 10 generations for diverging levels of fear towards humans and measured brain size and composition as well as habituation learning and conditioned place preference learning in young chicks. Brain size relative to body size as well as brainstem region size relative to whole brain size were significantly smaller in chicks selected for low fear of humans compared to chicks selected for high fear of humans. However, when including allometric effects in the model, these differences disappear but a tendency towards larger cerebra in low-fear chickens remains. Low-fear line chicks habituated more effectively to a fearful stimulus with prior experience of that same stimulus, whereas high-fear line chicks with previous experience of the stimulus had a response similar to naive chicks. The phenotypical changes are in line with previously described effects of domestication.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.200628domesticationcorrelated selection responsestamenesschickenbrain sizefear behaviour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecca Katajamaa
Per Jensen
spellingShingle Rebecca Katajamaa
Per Jensen
Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
Royal Society Open Science
domestication
correlated selection responses
tameness
chicken
brain size
fear behaviour
author_facet Rebecca Katajamaa
Per Jensen
author_sort Rebecca Katajamaa
title Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
title_short Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
title_full Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
title_fullStr Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
title_full_unstemmed Selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
title_sort selection for reduced fear in red junglefowl changes brain composition and affects fear memory
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Brain size reduction is a common trait in domesticated species when compared to wild conspecifics. This reduction can happen through changes in individual brain regions as a response to selection on specific behaviours. We selected red junglefowl for 10 generations for diverging levels of fear towards humans and measured brain size and composition as well as habituation learning and conditioned place preference learning in young chicks. Brain size relative to body size as well as brainstem region size relative to whole brain size were significantly smaller in chicks selected for low fear of humans compared to chicks selected for high fear of humans. However, when including allometric effects in the model, these differences disappear but a tendency towards larger cerebra in low-fear chickens remains. Low-fear line chicks habituated more effectively to a fearful stimulus with prior experience of that same stimulus, whereas high-fear line chicks with previous experience of the stimulus had a response similar to naive chicks. The phenotypical changes are in line with previously described effects of domestication.
topic domestication
correlated selection responses
tameness
chicken
brain size
fear behaviour
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.200628
work_keys_str_mv AT rebeccakatajamaa selectionforreducedfearinredjunglefowlchangesbraincompositionandaffectsfearmemory
AT perjensen selectionforreducedfearinredjunglefowlchangesbraincompositionandaffectsfearmemory
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