Library

Browse resources published by our research team.

In addition to full texts of our peer-reviewed articles, our library includes research digests that break down our peer-reviewed articles; in-depth reports that thoroughly examine a topic; commentaries that explain the significance of particular issues in wild animal welfare science; and short communications that briefly survey a field or topic.

Wild Animal Initiative adheres to Open Science TOP Guidelines. Read more here.

Michaël Beaulieu Michaël Beaulieu Michaël Beaulieu Michaël Beaulieu

Considering affective state as a central component of the response of animals to environmental changes

Michaël Beaulieu

Beaulieu, M. (2026). Considering affective state as a central component of the response of animals to environmental changes. Biology Letters, https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2025.0424

Authored by Wild Animal Initiative Research Manager Michaël Beaulieu, this paper was published in the January 2026 issue of Biology Letters.

Full text

Abstract

Current environmental changes are often considered as negatively impacting the affective state of animals. Yet, the interplay between environmental conditions and affective state should rather be viewed as a reciprocal and dynamic relationship, as variation in affective state likely determines how animals decide to respond to environmental changes. Here, I illustrate how affective states may contribute to determining how animals respond to environmental changes through phenotypic plasticity, environmental modification or dispersal. A condition for future studies to examine this hypothesis will be to consider the response of animals in parallel with valid indicators of affective state reflecting different affective dimensions (valence, arousal) over different timescales. Moreover, considering affective state as a central component of the response of animals to environmental changes implies that a condition to realistically investigate this response is to provide animals with the freedom to decide between options associated with different affective values.

Read More