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Dive into the research topics where Cécilia Houdelier is active.

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Featured researches published by Cécilia Houdelier.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2011

Higher inherent fearfulness potentiates the effects of chronic stress in the Japanese quail

Ludovic Calandreau; Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Aline Bertin; Paul Constantin; Cécile Arnould; Agathe Laurence; Sophie Lumineau; Cécilia Houdelier; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris; Alain Boissy; Christine Leterrier

There is considerable variability in the susceptibility of individuals to the adverse effects of chronic stress. In humans and other mammals, individual traits such as high anxiety are proposed as a vulnerability factor for the development of stress-related disorders. In the present study, we tested whether a similar behavioural trait in birds, higher emotional reactivity, also favours the occurrence of chronic stress-related behavioural and physiological dysfunction. For this, lines of Japanese quail divergently selected for a typical fear response in birds, the duration of tonic immobility, were subjected to unpredictable aversive stimulation over 2 weeks. Previous studies demonstrate that the selection program modifies the general underlying emotionality of the birds rather than exerting its effect only on tonic immobility. Interestingly, only birds selected for their higher emotionality exhibited significantly enhanced latency to first step and decreased locomotor activity in the open-field test after exposure to chronic stress compared to non-stressed control birds. This effect of chronic stress was selective for the tested dimension of bird emotional reactivity because there was no observed effect on the tonic immobility response. Moreover, chronically stressed birds selected for their higher emotionality exhibited significantly decreased basal corticosterone levels, a physiological marker of stress. These findings show that chronic stress is associated with changes in emotional reactivity and related physiological markers in birds. They also highlight emotional reactivity as an important predisposing factor for the occurrence of the adverse effects of chronic stress in birds.


Bioinspiration & Biomimetics | 2011

Influence of a mobile robot on the spatial behaviour of quail chicks

E. de Margerie; Sophie Lumineau; Cécilia Houdelier; M-A Richard Yris

Quail chicks encountered an autonomous mobile robot during their early development. The robot incorporated a heat source that stimulated following of chicks. The spatial behaviour of grown-up chicks was tested in an exploration test and a detour test. Chicks that grew with the mobile robot exhibited better spatial abilities than chicks grown with a static heat source. We discuss these results in the perspective of animal-robot interaction and of the role of early spatial experience on the behavioural development.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Development of Fearfulness in Birds: Genetic Factors Modulate Non-Genetic Maternal Influences

Cécilia Houdelier; Sophie Lumineau; Aline Bertin; Floriane Guibert; Emmanuel De Margerie; Matthieu Augery; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris

The development of fearfulness and the capacity of animals to cope with stressful events are particularly sensitive to early experience with mothers in a wide range of species. However, intrinsic characteristics of young animals can modulate maternal influence. This study evaluated the effect of intrinsic fearfulness on non-genetic maternal influence. Quail chicks, divergently selected for either higher (LTI) or lower fearfulness (STI) and from a control line (C), were cross-fostered by LTI or STI mothers. Behavioural tests estimated the chicks emotional profiles after separation from the mother. Whatever their genotype, the fearfulness of chicks adopted by LTI mothers was higher than that of chicks adopted by STI mothers. However, genetic background affected the strength of maternal effects: the least emotional chicks (STI) were the least affected by early experience with mothers. We demonstrated that young animals intrinsic fearfulness affects strongly their sensitivity to non-genetic maternal influences. A young animals behavioural characteristics play a fundamental role in its own behavioural development processes.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2013

Effect of mothering on the spatial exploratory behavior of quail chicks.

E. de Margerie; A. Peris; Florent Pittet; Cécilia Houdelier; Sophie Lumineau; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris

Previous maternal deprivation experiments demonstrated that absence of maternal care impacts the behavioral development of young animals. Here we assessed the influence of the presence of a mothering hen on the spatial exploration of Japanese quail chicks, after the mothering period. Brooded and nonbrooded chicks were placed in a novel environment containing feeding troughs. The distribution of chicks and their inter-individual distances were measured during repeated tests. Brooded chicks exhibited a higher ability to disperse, thereby progressively exploiting larger surfaces and gaining access to food more easily. The fact that exploration by nonbrooded chicks was delayed suggests a deficit in their exploratory motivation and/or spatial skills. We hypothesize that brooded chicks experienced the constraint to follow the mothering hen, and to adapt to frequent reconfigurations of their environment. The lack of this variability in the environment of nonbrooded chicks could have reduced adaptability of their spatial behavior.


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2002

Cyclic melatonin synchronises the circadian rhythm of feeding activity in Japanese quail, Coturnix c. japonica

Sophie Lumineau; Catherine Guyomarc'h; Berthe Vivien-Roels; Cécilia Houdelier

In Japanese quail, we can observe the circadian rhythm of feeding activity in constant conditions, especially in birds from selected lines. In order to try to test the importance of melatonin as hormonal output for the circadian system, we gave a 24-h period cycle of exogenous melatonin to some of these birds when they were free running. We used castrated males firstly in order to cancel the known effect of steroids on circadian organisation. Secondly, as castrated birds generally expressed a very short periodicity, it allowed us to check induced synchronisation more easily. We maintained ten castrated males in constant dim light. We divided the experiment into five successive phases. The birds received a 24-h period cycle of melatonin (M phase) or of control solution with only the alcoholic solvent (C phase) as a drink. Before and after each one of these two phases, we gave water continually to drink (W1, W2 and W3 phases). Thus, the successive phases were W1-M-W2-C-W3. We measured intake of liquids and plasma melatonin concentrations to check melatonin ingestion. We automatically recorded individual feeding activity by infrared detectors, and analysed this by spectral analysis. At the beginning of the experiment, eight birds showed a rhythmic feeding activity, with a mean period of 22.9 +/- 0.2 h, and the two others an arrhythmic circadian activity. During the 24-h period cycle of exogenous melatonin, for the rhythmic birds, the circadian period became approximately 24 h (23.9 +/- 0.2 h), the inactive phase corresponding to the period of melatonin availability. During the W2 and C phases, the circadian period was similar to that expressed during the W1 phase. Moreover, when birds only drink water, we found a significant positive relationship between the clarity of the circadian rhythm and the ratio, between the melatonin level of the inactive phase and that of the active phase. These facts support the hypothesis of the role of this hormone in the regulation of the circadian system, at least for feeding activity, in quail.


Animal | 2015

Environmental enrichment reduces behavioural alterations induced by chronic stress in Japanese quail

Laurence A; Cécilia Houdelier; Calandreau L; Arnould C; Favreau-Peigné A; Leterrier C; Alain Boissy; Sophie Lumineau

Animals perceiving repeated aversive events can become chronically stressed. Chronic activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis can have deleterious consequences on physiological parameters (e.g. BW, blood chemistry) and behaviour (e.g. emotional reactivity, stereotypies, cognition). Environmental enrichment (EE) can be a mean to reduce animal stress and to improve welfare. The aim of this study was first, to assess the effects of EE in battery cages on the behaviour of young Japanese quail and second, to evaluate the impact of EE on quail exposed to chronic stress. The experiment involved quail housed in EE cages and submitted or not to a chronic stress procedure (CSP) (EE cages, control quail: n=16, CSP quail: n=14) and quail housed in standard cages and exposed or not to the CSP (standard non-EE cages, control quail: n=12, CSP quail: n=16). Our procedure consisted of repeated aversive events (e.g. ventilators, delaying access to food, physical restraint, noise) presented two to five times per 24 h, randomly, for 15 days. During CSP, EE improved quails welfare as their stereotypic pacing decreased and they rested more. CSP decreased exploration in all quail. After the end of CSP, quail presented increased emotional reactivity in emergence test. However, the effect of EE varied with test. Finally, chronic stress effects on comfort behaviours in the emergence test were alleviated by EE. These results indicate that EE can alleviate some aspects of behavioural alterations induced by CSP.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Fearfulness Affects Quail Maternal Care and Subsequent Offspring Development

Florent Pittet; Cécilia Houdelier; Océane Le Bot; Christine Leterrier; Sophie Lumineau

Our study investigated relationships between a precocial bird’s fearfulness and maternal care, and the implication of maternal care as a vector for non-genomic transmission of fearfulness to chicks. We compared care given to chicks between two sets of female Japanese quail selected to present either high (LTI) or low fearfulness (STI). Chicks, from a broiler line, were adopted by these females following a sensitization procedure. Chicks’ fearfulness after separation from their mother was assessed by well-established procedures. LTIs took longer to present maternal responses, pecked chicks more during the first days post-hatch, presented impaired maternal vocal behaviour and were globally less active than STI females. Chicks mothered by LTIs presented more fearful reactions than did chicks mothered by STIs, supporting the hypothesis of a non-genetic maternal transmission of fearfulness. We suggest that the longer latencies required by LTIs to become maternal are a consequence of their greater fear of chicks, and that their lower general and vocal activity could be components of a heightened antipredatory strategy. We discuss the transmission of maternal fearfulness to fostered chicks, taking into account the possible implication of several well-known mechanisms underlying maternal effects.


Chronobiology International | 2007

DAILY LAYING TIME IN FREE-LIVING EUROPEAN STARLINGS: SOLAR NOON, A POTENTIAL SYNCHRONIZER

Cécilia Houdelier; Aline Bertin; Catherine Guyomarc'h; Marie‐Annick Richard; Sophie Lumineau

Reproduction is generally controlled by important temporal constraints involving complex adaptive mechanisms. Birds, in temperate zones, present marked breeding seasonality as well as marked daily organization of reproductive behavior, especially laying. Intra‐specific variability and determinants of this pattern have been investigated mainly in domestic non‐passerine birds. The present study analyzed the daily temporal organization of laying in a free‐living species, the European starling, Sturnus vulgaris. Breeding in a starling colony was monitored for five consecutive years using a non‐invasive method (infrared video camera) to precisely estimate laying times. European starlings present a marked daily laying rhythm, ovipositions occurring only during a morning species‐specific temporal window. Inside this laying window, time intervals between successive eggs varied greatly among females. Contrary to many species, the light/dark cycle did not appear to control laying time in European starlings, but daily variations of the ultraviolet composition of the solar spectrum appeared to be a possible Zeitgeber of this behavior.


Behavioural Processes | 2017

Brood size can influence maternal behaviour and chick’s development in precocial birds

Nadège Aigueperse; Florent Pittet; Emmanuel De Margerie; Céline Nicolle; Cécilia Houdelier; Sophie Lumineau

Mothers have a crucial influence on offspring development. Variations of maternal behaviour can be due to numerous parameters, for instance costs are related to the size of a brood/litter, which in turn can influence the level of mothers investment in each offspring. Here we investigated the influence of brood size on the behaviour of Japanese quail mothers and chicks during the mothering period and on offspring development. We compared two types of broods: small broods of three chicks (N=9) and large broods of six chicks (N=9). Behavioural tests assessed chicks social and emotional traits. Mothers of large broods emitted more maternal vocalisations at the beginning of the mothering period, but at the end they assumed more non-covering postures and trampled chicks more than mothers of small broods. Chicks in large broods huddled up more whereas chicks in small broods rested alone more frequently. Moreover, the social motivation of chicks in large broods was higher than that of chicks in small broods, although their emotional reactivity levels were similar. Our results evidence the importance of brood size for maintaining family cohesion and the influence of brood size on chicks interactions with their siblings. We evaluated the influence of mothers and siblings on chicks behavioural development.


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2003

Effect of a cranium-directed daily illumination cycle on the laying rhythm in Japanese quail.

Cécilia Houdelier; Sophie Lumineau; Catherine Guyomarc'h; Jean-Pierre Richard

This study tests the effect on the laying rhythm of a light cycle reaching directly the encephala via a diode in Japanese quail maintained in constant darkness. In DD, all the birds expressed their free-running laying rhythm (period close to 25 h). When the diode is switched on 14 h per 24 h cycle, females showed the same organization as in LD with the same laying time. Thus, a photoperiodic cycle, where light was only perceived through the skull of the female quail, could synchronize its laying rhythm. This device with a LED is an interesting alternative solution to eye-patching or blinding of birds.

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Sophie Lumineau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Florent Pittet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Catherine Guyomarc'h

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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E. de Margerie

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Emmanuel De Margerie

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alain Boissy

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Aline Bertin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christine Leterrier

François Rabelais University

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A. Peris

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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