Environmental drivers of welfare in urban rats: A multimodal field study of micro-habitat conditions and affective behavior

Grantee: Emily Mackevicius

 

Institution: Basis Research Institute, United States

Grant amount: $100,000

 

Grant type: Challenge grants

Focal species: Brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) and others

 

Conservation status: Least concern

Disciplines: Wildlife management, physiology, animal behavior

 

Research location: United States


Project summary

This project will investigate how urban micro-habitat conditions shape the affective and social lives of free-ranging brown rats (Rattus norvegicus). Rats are highly social, intelligent, and abundant animals, and better tools for understanding their behavior could support both wild animal welfare science and integrative management practices. The project will first test whether indicators developed in laboratory rodents such as ultrasonic vocalizations, posture, movement, social behavior, and surface temperature, can be used to infer affective state and social experience in urban field settings. The team will then model how environmental features predict these indicators, with the goal of identifying urban conditions associated with positive or negative experiences. 

Why we funded this project

This project addresses a neglected but important question: how fine-scale features of human-built environments shape the subjective experiences of abundant urban animals. The resulting methods could support future welfare studies across sites, cities, and taxa, and provide tools for welfare-aware, evidence-based urban management.


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Towards welfare-centered prescribed fire

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Developing & refining behavioral assays for the measurement of ‘sentient welfare’ in gastropod molluscs