Abnormal Feather Phenotype Associated with a Fatal Stress Response and Unusual Tolerance to Human Contact in the Zebra Finch (Taeniopygia castanotis)

Author:

West Lucas R1,Day Lainy B2

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi;, Email: stardust3980@gmail.com

2. Biology Department, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi

Abstract

The zebra finch (Taeniopygia castanotis) is a songbird sold in the pet trade and commonly used in research. In this report, we describe a set of partially overlapping traits shared by 3 birds in 2 broods from the same nest box that included atypical morphologic, developmental, and behavioral characteristics. The most obvious feature of this novel phenotype was feathers exhibiting a clumped appearance, which was accompanied by slow growth, delayed expression of adult plumage traits, and tameness, which we define as a lack of escape response upon handling without behavioral indicators of stress such as rapid breathing. Surprisingly, these birds also displayed a fatal response to nonhuman stressors. In one brood, a male expressed all of these characteristics, 2 females were wild-type, and a male sibling expressed only a hyperactive stress response but was otherwise normal. This indicates that the stress response could be inherited independently of the other abnormalities found in the male nest mate. In a second brood, a male bearing the abnormal feather phenotype behaved similarly to the male in the first brood, supporting the possibility that tameness is genetically associated with the unusual feather phenotype. The 2 other male and 2 female nest mates from this brood were behaviorally and visually normal, although the females developed slowly. Although similar traits have appeared in the aviary previously, such as slow development and small size, these are the first cases documented in detail. This correlated suite of traits suggests a linkage among altered feather growth, developmental rate, and brain and/or physiologic traits influencing normal fear and stress responses in the zebra finch. Awareness and study of the mechanism(s) linking these traits by examination of underlying genetic or environmental factors will allow a better understanding of the relationship between physical and behavioral traits in domesticated laboratory animals.

Publisher

American Association for Laboratory Animal Science

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