Supplementary material referred to in book chapters
Click
on each thumbnail to see a larger image. If we have used an image
of yours without permission or without proper credit, please contact
me on gmason@uoguelph.ca so that this can be immediately recitified. |
Chapter 2 (Bergeron et al.) |
| Illustrated here
are: typical housing conditions for pregnant sows which show high
levels of stereotypic behaviour; a zoo walrus lacking tusks due to wear
and/or infection from intense rooting at its concerete pool; the three
typical 'weaning' methods used for horses; and some of the techniques resorted to in the equine world to render crib-biting
('cribbing'), air-sucking and weaving hard or impossible. For
images and videos of ungulates, please visit the video and image library. |
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Stalled sows
(source unknown) |

Zoo walrus missing tusks
(Diana Reiss) |
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A 'box-weaned' foal
(Amanda
Badnell-Waters) |
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'Barn-weaned' foals
(Amanda Badnell-Waters) |
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A 'paddock-weaned' foal
(Amanda
Badnell-Waters) |
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Cribbing collar
(Source unknown) |
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Cribbing collar
(Source unknown) |
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Cribbing collars
(Frank Ödberg) |
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Cribbing collar
(Source unknown) |
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Cribbing collar with shock device
(supplied by Frank Ödberg;
original source unknown) |
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Cribbing collar with spikes
(Daniel Mills) |
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Horse following operation to throat to prevent crib-biting
(Daniel Mills) |
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Bars to prevent weaving
(Daniel Mills)
|
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Bars to prevent weaving
(Jonathan Cooper) |

Hanging bricks to prevent weaving
(Daniel Mills) |
Chapter 3 (Clubb & Vickery) |
| For images and videos of carnivores, visit the video and image library. |
Chapter 4 (Würbel) |
| For images and videos of rodents, visit the video and image library. |
Chapter 5 (Garner) |
| Illustrated below are
some of the experimental set-ups used to assess the behavioural/cognitive correlates of stereotypic behaviours in captive
animals. For
images and videos of rodents, visit the video and image library. |

T-maze for assessing perseveration in lab. mice
(Joe Garner) |
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Spatial discrimination task used to measure trials to acquisition
and extinction in bears
(Sophie Vickery) |

Horse eating reward after pressing an operant button
(Sebastian McBride) |
|
|
Chapter 6 (Novak et al.) |
| Here are figures referred to in this chapter. For more images and videos of primates, visit the video and image library. |

Figure 1:
Eye-saluting in a rhesus monkey
(Photo courtesy of the Wisconsin Primate Lab.)
|

Figure 2:
Deprivation-reared 6 month rhesus infant clinging to an inanimate cloth 'surrogate mother'
|

Figure 3
Peer-reared monkeys clinging to one another
(Photo courtesy of the Wisconsin Primate Lab.)
|

Figure 4:
Stanard individual lab. cage for rhesus monkeys
|

Figure 6:
Self-biting in a rhesus monkey - a common behaviour in individually-caged adults (although actual wounding is rare).
|
Chapter 7 (Lewis et al.) |
| Here
we show the enriched 'kennels' used by the Lewis group to provide
deer mice with relatively large, complex environments. For videos
of stereotypic behaviour in deer mice, visit the video
and image library. |
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Chapter 10 (Mills & Luescher) |
| For means of physically preventing stereotypic behaviours in
horses, see the supplementary material for Chapter 2, above. For
images and videos of companion animals, visit the video and image library. |