2015
DOI: 10.1002/oby.21193
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Predation risk modulates diet‐induced obesity in male C57BL/6 mice

Abstract: Objective: In this study, the behavioral and physiological changes induced by experimentally varying the risk of predation in male mice fed a high-fat diet were examined. In particular, the study aimed to assess whether the risk of being predated modulates the body weight gain, providing an ecological context for the obesity resistance observed in many species of small mammals. Methods: Body weight, food intake, physical activity, and core body temperature of 35 male C57BL/6 mice were monitored for 20 days, wh… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…As with studies on birds, the evidence with respect to stochastic variations in food supply are less clear cut compared with the impacts of modified predation risk. There is some limited support for the idea that increased stochasticity drives elevated fat storage Cao et al, 2009;Zhang et al, 2012;Zhu et al, 2014); however, other studies suggest the reverse (Monarca et al, 2015b). In humans, this idea is generally called the 'food insecurity' hypothesis, or the 'hunger-obesity' paradigm (Nettle et al, 2017;Dhurandhar, 2016), i.e.…”
Section: Set-point Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As with studies on birds, the evidence with respect to stochastic variations in food supply are less clear cut compared with the impacts of modified predation risk. There is some limited support for the idea that increased stochasticity drives elevated fat storage Cao et al, 2009;Zhang et al, 2012;Zhu et al, 2014); however, other studies suggest the reverse (Monarca et al, 2015b). In humans, this idea is generally called the 'food insecurity' hypothesis, or the 'hunger-obesity' paradigm (Nettle et al, 2017;Dhurandhar, 2016), i.e.…”
Section: Set-point Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The predation risk treatment involved the broadcasting of playback calls from nocturnal raptors (Monarca et al ., 2015b), specifically, Barn Owl ( Tyto alba ) and Eurasian Eagle‐Owl ( Bubo bubo) (European bird calls; Jean C. Roché, Kosmos Verlag, Stuttgart, Germany). The owl calls were broadcasted for 2 min, every 2 h, during night time (9 pm to 7 am ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ideas that adiposity and muscularity are involved in the ability to avoid predators have been refined (Higginson, McNamara & Houston, 2012), and the predation‐starvation framework has been extended to understand the adiposity regulation in several species. Empirical data have largely supported the premise that exposure and elevated perception of increased predation risk leads to reduced body mass in birds and mammals (Gosler, Greenwood & Perrins, 1995; Tidhar, Bonier & Speakman, 2007; Monarca, Mathias & Speakman, 2015b; Genné‐Bacon, Trinko & DiLeone, 2016; Walters et al ., 2017). This is potentially because larger/fatter mammals are slower and less able to outrun predators (Hodges, Cunningham & Mills, 2014), or because they are unable to exploit small refuges to avoid predation (Sundell & Norrdahl, 2002; Carlsen et al ., 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…[ (Blanchard et al 1995;Carlsen et al 1999;Higginson et al 2012Higginson et al , 2016Monarca et al 2015;Ramler et al 2014;Thaler et al 2012;Tidhar et al 2007). Although this has been generally interpreted as a "stress response" (Kestemont and Baras 2007) it is likely that it is a strategic response of the system evolved to optimize foraging gains against foraging risk (Tidhar et al 2007).…”
Section: Explanatory Power Evidence and Testable Predictions Of The mentioning
confidence: 99%