Introduction of wild animals to captivity induces chronic stress often leading to weight loss, increases in baseline corticosterone, and increased DNA damage.To mitigate these effects, providing enrichment to the captive environment has been proposed.Yet, studies investigating the physiological effects of captive environment enrichments are rare in wild birds.Here, we test the potential of a single enrichment factor by monitoring weight, baseline corticosterone, and DNA damage in two groups of house sparrows (Passer domesticus) during introduction to captivity: (1) birds in standard laboratory cages with food dishes and (2) birds in cages where food is spread across artificial grass to simulate a more natural First clinical case report of Cytauxzoon sp. infection in a domestic cat in France foraging environment.After 3 weeks, all birds switched environments for 3 additional weeks.
Weight was monitored bi-weekly while baseline corticosterone and DNA damage were measured weekly.Initially, both groups lost significant weight and weight plateaued by about 2 weeks of captivity.However, after switching housing environments, only initially grass-caged birds continued to lose weight.After one week of captivity, grass-caged birds had lower DNA damage compared to standard-caged birds.Over Mapping Land Cover and Tree Canopy Cover in Zagros Forests of Iran: Application of Sentinel-2, Google Earth, and Field Data time, standard-caged birds remained unchanged and initially grass-caged birds increased damage after switching housing environments.
There were no significant differences in baseline corticosterone across groups or over time.Our findings provide limited support for artificial grass as a substantial enrichment in mitigating the physiological consequences associated with introduction to captivity.Furthermore, given the challenges to husbandry of using artificial grass, the data are insufficiently strong to recommend the use of artificial grass as a stress-reducing enrichment to laboratory housing.