Abstract
Unlike mice, adult laboratory rats do not spontaneously build nests when nesting
material is offered. As a result, nesting material is often regarded as unsuitable
environmental enrichment for laboratory rats. Wild rats and pet rats, however, have
been observed to build complex nests from nesting material at hand. It was
hypothesized that nest building in rats is an acquired behaviour, rather than
genetically predisposed. To test this hypothesis, the progeny of three Wistar rats
provided with nesting material (Kleenex tissues) during pregnancy and three
standard-housed rats were divided in 34 same-sex couples with access to nesting
material: (1) from the age of 8 weeks (
