Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo: An observational study

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Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo : An observational study. / Gjendal, Karen; Ottesen, Jan Lund; Sørensen, Dorte Bratbo.

I: Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science, Bind 44, 6, 2018.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Gjendal, K, Ottesen, JL & Sørensen, DB 2018, 'Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo: An observational study', Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science, bind 44, 6. https://doi.org/10.23675/sjlas.v44i0.566

APA

Gjendal, K., Ottesen, J. L., & Sørensen, D. B. (2018). Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo: An observational study. Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science, 44, [6]. https://doi.org/10.23675/sjlas.v44i0.566

Vancouver

Gjendal K, Ottesen JL, Sørensen DB. Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo: An observational study. Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science. 2018;44. 6. https://doi.org/10.23675/sjlas.v44i0.566

Author

Gjendal, Karen ; Ottesen, Jan Lund ; Sørensen, Dorte Bratbo. / Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo : An observational study. I: Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science. 2018 ; Bind 44.

Bibtex

@article{68711c9944884a2697c1030781dcd341,
title = "Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo: An observational study",
abstract = "It is argued that mice have poor colour vision and are insensitive to the colour red, which they in theory perceive as dark. Therefore, the red tinted Bio-Serv Mouse Igloo{\textregistered} is used to provide mice with a dark shelter while enabling humans to monitor the animals through the shelter without disturbing them. However, we do not know if mice like the colour red. Therefore, this study investigated whether mice prefer an amber or blue igloo over a red igloo, still making it possible for humans to see through the igloos. A preference test consisting of 3 cages each containing a different coloured igloo, connected to a barren central cage, was conducted for 11 h 20 min in 32 female B6 mice. The results showed that some female B6 mice did not like to use the Bio-Serv Mouse Igloo{\textregistered} as a shelter, regardless of colour. Almost half of the mice chose to stay outside the igloos, but when choosing an igloo the mice preferred the blue or amber igloo over the red igloo.",
author = "Karen Gjendal and Ottesen, {Jan Lund} and S{\o}rensen, {Dorte Bratbo}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.23675/sjlas.v44i0.566",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science",
issn = "0901-3393",
publisher = "R R Consult",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Does colour matter? Preference of mice for different colours of the house mouse igloo

T2 - An observational study

AU - Gjendal, Karen

AU - Ottesen, Jan Lund

AU - Sørensen, Dorte Bratbo

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - It is argued that mice have poor colour vision and are insensitive to the colour red, which they in theory perceive as dark. Therefore, the red tinted Bio-Serv Mouse Igloo® is used to provide mice with a dark shelter while enabling humans to monitor the animals through the shelter without disturbing them. However, we do not know if mice like the colour red. Therefore, this study investigated whether mice prefer an amber or blue igloo over a red igloo, still making it possible for humans to see through the igloos. A preference test consisting of 3 cages each containing a different coloured igloo, connected to a barren central cage, was conducted for 11 h 20 min in 32 female B6 mice. The results showed that some female B6 mice did not like to use the Bio-Serv Mouse Igloo® as a shelter, regardless of colour. Almost half of the mice chose to stay outside the igloos, but when choosing an igloo the mice preferred the blue or amber igloo over the red igloo.

AB - It is argued that mice have poor colour vision and are insensitive to the colour red, which they in theory perceive as dark. Therefore, the red tinted Bio-Serv Mouse Igloo® is used to provide mice with a dark shelter while enabling humans to monitor the animals through the shelter without disturbing them. However, we do not know if mice like the colour red. Therefore, this study investigated whether mice prefer an amber or blue igloo over a red igloo, still making it possible for humans to see through the igloos. A preference test consisting of 3 cages each containing a different coloured igloo, connected to a barren central cage, was conducted for 11 h 20 min in 32 female B6 mice. The results showed that some female B6 mice did not like to use the Bio-Serv Mouse Igloo® as a shelter, regardless of colour. Almost half of the mice chose to stay outside the igloos, but when choosing an igloo the mice preferred the blue or amber igloo over the red igloo.

U2 - 10.23675/sjlas.v44i0.566

DO - 10.23675/sjlas.v44i0.566

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85061841425

VL - 44

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Laboratory Animal Science

SN - 0901-3393

M1 - 6

ER -

ID: 217946439