Dear MARMAM subscribers,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce a new publication on the 
neuropeptide hormone oxytocin's relationship with maternal behaviour in grey 
seals:

Robinson, K.J., Twiss, S.D., Hazon, N. & Pomeroy, P.P. (2015).
Maternal Oxytocin is Linked to Close Mother-Infant Proximity in Grey Seals 
(Halichoerus grypus)
PLOS ONE, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144577
Abstract:
Maternal behaviour is a crucial component of reproduction in all mammals; 
however the quality of care that mothers give to infants can vary greatly. It 
is vital to document variation in maternal behaviour caused by the 
physiological processes controlling its expression. This underlying physiology 
should be conserved throughout reproductive events and should be replicated 
across all individuals of a species; therefore, any correlates to maternal care 
quality may be present across many individuals or contexts. Oxytocin modulates 
the initiation and expression of maternal behaviour in mammals; therefore we 
tested whether maternal plasma oxytocin concentrations correlated to key 
maternal behaviours in wild grey seals (Halichoerus grypus). Plasma oxytocin 
concentrations in non-breeding individuals (4.3 ±0.5 pg/ml) were significantly 
lower than those in mothers with dependent pups in both early (8.2 ±0.8 pg/ml) 
and late (6.9 ±0.7 pg/ml) lactation. Maternal plasma oxytocin concentrations 
were not correlated to the amount of nursing prior to sampling, or a mother's 
nursing intensity throughout the dependant period. Mothers with high plasma 
oxytocin concentrations stayed closer to their pups, reducing the likelihood of 
mother-pup separation during lactation which is credited with causing 
starvation, the largest cause of pup mortality in grey seals. This is the first 
study to link endogenous oxytocin concentrations in wild mammalian mothers with 
any type of maternal behaviour. Oxytocin's structure and function is widely 
conserved across mammalian mothers, including humans. Defining the impact the 
oxytocin system has on maternal behaviour highlights relationships that may 
occur across many individuals or species, and such behaviours heavily influence 
infant development and an individual's lifetime reproductive success.

The article can be found at: 
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0144577
The article is open access; so anyone who is interested in the manuscript 
should be able to download a pdf of it. However if you have any problems 
getting a copy please email 
kj...@st-andrews.ac.uk<mailto:kj...@st-andrews.ac.uk>.

Kind regards,
Kelly Robinson
Sea Mammal Research Unit
University of St Andrews


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