Logo do repositório
  • Página Inicial(current)
  • Buscar
    Por Data de PublicaçãoPor AutorPor TítuloPor Assunto
  • Tutoriais
  • Documentos
  • Sobre o RI
  • Eventos
    Repositório Institucional da UFRN: 15 anos de conexão com o conhecimento
  • Padrão
  • Amarelo
  • Azul
  • Verde
  • English
  • Português do Brasil
Entrar

SIGAA

  1. Início
  2. Pesquisar por Autor

Navegando por Autor "Chagas, Ana Cecilia Correia Santos das"

Filtrar resultados informando as primeiras letras
Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
  • Resultados por página
  • Opções de Ordenação
  • Carregando...
    Imagem de Miniatura
    Artigo
    Hormonal correlates of behavioural profiles and coping strategies in captive capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus)
    (2018-10) Ferreira, Vitor Hugo Bessa; Silva, Carolina Pereira Cadório da; Fonseca, Elanne de Paiva; Chagas, Ana Cecilia Correia Santos das; Almeida, Raissa Nobrega de; Sousa, Maria Bernardete Cordeiro de; Silva, Hélderes Peregrino Alves da; Galvão-Coelho, Nicole Leite; Ferreira, Renata Gonçalves
    In this study, we tested the hypothesis that individual differences in behavioural profiles correlate to differences in stress-related behaviours and hormonal levels in captive brown capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus). Based on a sample of 25 animals, 143 h of behavioural data collection and 518 faecal samples, principal component analyses indicated the existence of four components that characterize the individuals´ Genus Normative Behaviour (GNB) (KMO = 0.531, X2 = 127.672, p <  0.001): ‘Feeding’, ‘Sociability’, ‘Exploration’, and ‘Activity’. Other four components are related to stress coping styles (based on Behaviour Potentially Indicative of Stress – BPIS) (KMO = 0.550, X2 = 329.303, p <  0.001): ‘Self-directed’; ‘Restless’, ‘Ingestion/Self-Scratching’, and ‘Stereotyped’. More active individuals exhibit rapid stress-related behaviours (r = 0.443; p =  0.044) while less active individuals exhibit more stationary stress-related behaviours (r = -0.519; p =  0.013). Akaike information criteria indicated that the best linear regression model to predict the physiological profile (Faecal Glucocorticoid Metabolites - FGM) included three GNB and three BPIS components. ‘Sociability’ (p <  0.05), ‘Exploration’ (p <  0.05), and ‘Ingestion/Self-scratching’ (p <  0.05) predicted lower FGM levels. ‘Activity’ (p <  0.05), ‘Self-directed’ (p <  0.05), and ‘Stereotyped’ (p <  0.05) predicted higher FGM levels. ‘Feeding’ and ‘Restless’ factors were not included in the models. Our results support previous studies indicating that animals within the same population differ in the way they behave and react to stressful conditions, and these are correlated to different physiological profiles. Mapping inter-individual differences in stress coping strategies may help clarify the long-term reported incongruity between behavioural and physiological indicators of welfare in captive animals, supporting better management practices and assisting translational models of the development of psychopathologies.
  • Nenhuma Miniatura disponível
    Artigo
    Personality traits modulate stress responses after enclosure change of captive capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus)
    (Elsevier BV, 2020-09-22) Ferreira, Vitor Hugo Bessa; Fonseca, Elanne De Paiva; Chagas, Ana Cecilia Correia Santos das; Pinheiro, Luiz Guilherme Mesquita; Sousa, Maria Bernardete Cordeiro de; Silva, Hélderes Peregrino Alves da; Galvão-Coelho, Nicole Leite; Ferreira, Renata Gonçalves
    Husbandry procedures may cause behavioral and physiological changes to animals living in captivity. However, an individual’s reaction is not uniform and may be related to different coping strategies. In this study, we analyzed whether and how 12 adult captive capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus) varying in four personality axes (‘Feeding’, ‘Sociability’, ‘Exploration’, and ‘Activity’) differed in their stress responses to an enclosure change. Behavioral data and fecal samples of the individuals were collected for two months before (97 h and 246 fecal samples) and 14 days after the enclosure change (52 h and 666 fecal samples). We used Akaike Information Criteria to select the best linear regression models having personality axes and the period after enclosure change as predictive factors and behaviors potentially indicative of stress (BPIS) and levels of fecal glucocorticoid metabolites (FGM) as the response variables. Best models indicate that specific personality axes acted as a buffer and improved individual stress coping, mainly at the physiological level. More sociable and more active individuals did not show the peak of FGM levels as that exhibited by their less sociable and less active counterparts on the first day of the enclosure change. The link between exploration and resilience to acute stress was less clear: more exploratory individuals showed an increase in FGM levels during the first week of enclosure change, while the less exploratory ones showed a later increase, during the second-week post-enclosure change, suggesting a lesser capacity to recover from stressful stimuli in these individuals. The results presented in this study build on growing literature showing that animals differ in their behavioral profiles and that these differences relate to resilience to environmental disturbances, which may impact individual survival and reproduction, resulting in less genetic diversity of captive colonies and increased issues related to research replicability. We argue that these interindividual differences must be considered in husbandry decisions and during research data collection for the sake of animal welfare and reliable science
Repositório Institucional - UFRN Campus Universitário Lagoa NovaCEP 59078-970 Caixa postal 1524 Natal/RN - BrasilUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte© Copyright 2025. Todos os direitos reservados.
Contato+55 (84) 3342-2260 - R232Setor de Repositórios Digitaisrepositorio@bczm.ufrn.br
DSpaceIBICT
OasisBR
LAReferencia
Customizado pela CAT - BCZM