• If you are interested in meeting me, please email Newberg Animal Shelter at [email protected] with a completed Adoption Application. (newberganimals.com)
  • For more information, please contact Warwick Animal Shelter at 401-468-4377. (cranstononline.com)
  • Tanya Nash, customer care supervisor for the Heritage Humane Society, said it's not uncommon for pets in the shelter to become bonded and have to be adopted together. (wydaily.com)
  • She said that's why if a person falls in love with a pet that's part of a bonded pair and isn't willing to adopt both, Nash said the shelter will try to find them an animal with a similar personality to adopt. (wydaily.com)
  • Rescue Me helps people adopt animals from individuals, families, shelters and rescue groups. (animalresourcesinc.com)
  • Every item sold funds food for rescue animals in need. (animalresourcesinc.com)
  • Only $4.95 Shipping Deal at The Animal Rescue Site! (animalresourcesinc.com)
  • Our partners at San Antonio Animal Care Services came to the rescue! (adltexas.org)
  • The rescue was founded as a way to move these animals into foster homes for socialization and proper attentive care, as well as streamline the adoption process and provide accurate thorough information to adopters about these often misunderstood animals. (petfinder.com)
  • Many rescue centres have expertise in pairing up rabbits, and will often allow you to bring your own rabbit along to the centre to meet potential partners on neutral ground where there will be less chance of territorial squabbling. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • If you are about to take on your first rabbit, please adopt a bonded pair from a rescue centre. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • We would always recommend you let a good rescue do the pairing for you, especially if you have not tried to pair up rabbits before. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • These species-specific differences have shown to correlate with social behaviors, and in monogamous prairie voles are important for facilitation of pair bonding. (wikipedia.org)
  • Prairie voles ( Microtus ochrogaster ) form male-female pair-bonds and stick with their partner for life. (sciencenews.org)
  • Biologists trying to capture voles to study would frequently catch two at a time, because "what they were finding were these male-female pairs," he says. (sciencenews.org)
  • The process of forming a secure social bond lasting for a very long period of time is too important to restrict to a single molecule," says Carter, who helped discover the link between oxytocin and social behavior in prairie voles more than 30 years ago. (publicradioeast.org)
  • The team's experiment was designed to disrupt pair-bonding and other oxytocin-related behaviors in prairie voles.These include parenting, milk production, forming social attachments, and socially monogamous pair bonding. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Prairie voles do not need oxytocin receptors to form pair bonds, a new study finds. (publicradioeast.org)
  • And when these pups grew up, they formed pair bonds just like other prairie voles. (publicradioeast.org)
  • That could mean using a different molecule, vasopressin, Carter says, which also plays a role in social bonding in both humans and prairie voles. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Because prairie voles are one of the few mammalian species known to form lifelong monogamous relationships, researchers study them to better understand the biology of social bonding. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Studies in the 1990s using drugs that prevent oxytocin from binding to its receptor found that voles were unable to pair bond, giving rise to the idea that the hormone is essential to forming such attachments. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • To the researchers' surprise, the mutant voles formed pair bonds just as readily as normal voles. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Even more surprising for Manoli and Shah than the pair bonding was the fact that a significant percentage of the female voles were able to give birth and provide milk for their pups. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Female voles without receptors proved perfectly capable of giving birth, on the same timeframe and in the same way as the regular animals, even though labor has been thought to rely on oxytocin. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Prairie voles are small rodents that form lifelong pair-bonds. (medscape.com)
  • Lowell found that prairie voles lived two to a nest-the same pair-for life. (medscape.com)
  • Decades of research on monogamous prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster), along with comparative studies using the related non-bonding meadow vole (M. pennsylvanicus), have revealed many of the neural and molecular mechanisms necessary for pair-bond formation in that species. (cdc.gov)
  • To test the hypothesis that neural gene expression differences underlie differential capacities to bond, we performed RNA-sequencing on tissue from three brain regions important for bonding and other social behaviors across bond-forming prairie voles and non-bonding meadow voles. (cdc.gov)
  • CONCLUSIONS: These results reinforce the importance of pre-mating differences that confer the ability to form pair bonds in prairie voles but not promiscuous species such as meadow voles. (cdc.gov)
  • If you think this pair of beautiful girls would suit your home then please head to the website and complete a pre-adopt form. (haart.org.au)
  • Nash said it's more common for cats than dogs to be bonded to each other and cats tend to be easier to adopt in pairs. (wydaily.com)
  • She said they won't separate pairs but they also look at a person's home life when considering who to adopt a bonded pair. (wydaily.com)
  • He has studied monogamous pair bonds in wild white-handed gibbons (Hylobates lar) and siamang (H.syndactylus) in northern Sumatra, Indonesia, and conducted short-term research on titi monkeys (Callicebus moloch) and red-bearded saki monkeys (Pithecia aequatorialis) in the upper Amazon of Ecuador. (rutgers.edu)
  • Most birds form monogamous pair bonds during the breeding season, and 80% of returning birds nest with mates from the previous year. (si.edu)
  • The study provides rare findings about wild animal social behavior that are based on precisely measured effects of relationship manipulation rather than on observation alone. (phys.org)
  • Pairs of bats that lived together were identified as test pairs whose grooming behavior was compared to two other types of pairs-control pairs that were not forced into proximity, and familiar pairs of bats that were caught from the same roost. (phys.org)
  • HLP, Inc. and PetHarbor make no assertions about the availability, behavior or condition of any animal. (petharbor.com)
  • The little information scientists have on their biology and behavior comes from a few captive animals. (nwf.org)
  • In the experiment, the researchers placed paired couples in situations with and without an audience and observed their behavior. (mpg.de)
  • I was studying pair-bonding and social behavior in animals, and as my research evolved, I discovered and realized that there had to be a physiology for love-a biology for love. (medscape.com)
  • Oxytocin had already been called the "hormone of mother love" by people studying maternal behavior in animals and humans. (medscape.com)
  • BACKGROUND: Pair bonding with a reproductive partner is rare among mammals but is an important feature of human social behavior. (cdc.gov)
  • Once you have witnessed a bonded pair of rabbits grooming each other, lying down together, and eating together, it's unlikely you will ever want to return to keeping a solitary rabbit. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • Getting two rabbits to live together is called bonding, mixing or pairing. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • Mixed-sex pairs usually work best, so if you are thinking of getting rabbits for the first time, it's advisable to get a male and female, although same-sex pairs are not uncommon. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • Neutering is important for so many reasons and absolutely necessary when pairing rabbits. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • Ideally, prospective rabbits for pairing should each be tested before mixing, and, if EC detected, treatment started (It requires a 28-day treatment course). (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • If you already have a rabbit then look for a single rabbit to introduce, if this is your first rabbit then look for 'bonded' bunnies, this means two or more rabbits that have already been paired up. (rabbitrehome.org.uk)
  • Rabbits form close bonds so rescues will not split up existing pairs. (rabbitrehome.org.uk)
  • By observing the animals they care for every day, Georgia Aquarium's research teams can learn vital information about the behaviors, diets, and habits of these species in ways that would be impossible in their natural habitat. (discovery.com)
  • The study, published in the journal Neuron , comes after decades of research suggesting that behaviors like pair-bonding and parenting depend on oxytocin. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Carter believes oxytocin is the central player in behaviors including pair bonding, parenting and lactation. (publicradioeast.org)
  • But she says animals that are born without the ability to respond to the hormone appear to find other ways to replicate behaviors that are critical to their survival. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Removing the oxytocin receptor in animal models still resulted in monogamous mating, attachment, and parental bonding behaviors, although females without the receptor produced milk in smaller quantities. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Males of this species form lifelong same-sex pair bonds around the age of 10, and don't father calves with females until they are 20- to 25-years-old. (popsci.com)
  • Guinea Pigs are $45 for each unaltered, $65 for neutered males, $80 for spayed females, $90 for bonded pairs. (petfinder.com)
  • The females were even able to produce milk for their offspring, though the amount was less than with unaltered animals. (publicradioeast.org)
  • His current interests focus on a feature of primate biology that largely differentiates these animals from most other mammals: cohesive social bonds between adult males and females persisting beyond estrus. (rutgers.edu)
  • Of particular interest are the affiliative bonds between males and lactating females, known as "friendships. (rutgers.edu)
  • Males will pursue females in short chases through the understory while they are establishing a pair bond. (si.edu)
  • Find other pets for adoption from Evergreen Animal Protective League now. (animalshelter.org)
  • Adoption fees: Hamsters & Rats are $10 each for the first three animals, then $5 each thereafter. (petfinder.com)
  • Now, a study suggests that the "love hormone" once thought essential for their bonding - oxytocin - might not be so necessary after all. (sciencenews.org)
  • The "love hormone" oxytocin may not play as critical a role in bonding as previously believed. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • The results indicate that the biology underlying pair bonding and parenting isn't purely dictated by the receptors for oxytocin, sometimes referred to as the "love hormone. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • In retrospect, he says, the result makes sense because pair bonding is essential to a prairie vole's survival. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Like T.J. and Prairie, two Bald Eagles, a "pair bond," the center's only eagle couple. (inquirer.com)
  • My research took that to the level of comparing adult-adult relationships and using a prairie vole animal model. (medscape.com)
  • Findings reveal parenting and bonding aren't purely dictated by oxytocin receptors. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Humans also engage in social pair bonding, where two individuals will form a close relationship that does not involve sex. (wikipedia.org)
  • In humans and other vertebrates, pair bonds are created by a combination of social interaction and biological factors including neurotransmitters like oxytocin, vasopressin, and dopamine. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Bordetella genus includes additional pathogens of animals and humans, including some that cause pertussis-like respiratory illness. (cdc.gov)
  • Public health officials and others concerned with appropriate actions to take at hazardous waste sites may want information on levels of exposure associated with more subtle effects in humans or animals (LOAELs) or exposure levels below which no adverse effects (NOAELs) have been observed. (cdc.gov)
  • The agents documented and list- ed that carcinogens commonly show tween tumour sites in humans and ed as carcinogenic to humans one or more of 10 key characteristics experimental animals. (who.int)
  • I no longer fit into my family's lifestyle, so I came to Animal Humane Society to find a new home. (animalhumanesociety.org)
  • Tanya Nash with the Heritage Humane Society said it isn't uncommon for pets, especially cats, to come in as bonded pairs. (wydaily.com)
  • Animal Humane Society's shelters are licensed and inspected by the Minnesota Board of Animal Health. (animalhumanesociety.org)
  • Don't forget to check the other animal shelters near me there are many other pets needing a fur-ever home. (animalshelter.org)
  • Small Angels was founded in the fall of 2003 when the organizers recognized a need for a group to help small animals abandoned at animal shelters. (petfinder.com)
  • Animals are acquired directly via public surrenders and from local shelters and animal welfare groups. (petfinder.com)
  • Nash said most shelters consider animals who have lived together for more than a year to be a bonded pair. (wydaily.com)
  • I am a friendly Blonde Buff American, Archie is a large 9yr Lab mix, weighs 68 lbs. animal shelters are filled with dogs and cats who must find homes. (newideas.net)
  • The majority of monogamous avians form long-term pair bonds which typically result in seasonal mating: these species breed with a single partner, raise their young, and then pair up with a new mate to repeat the cycle during the next season. (wikipedia.org)
  • Some avians such as swans, bald eagles, California condors, and the Atlantic Puffin are not only monogamous, but also form lifelong pair bonds. (wikipedia.org)
  • The process of how social bonds form is this fundamentally mysterious thing that a lot of people are interested in, but have very different interpretations of how it happens," said Gerald Carter, senior author of the study and assistant professor of evolution, ecology and organismal biology at The Ohio State University. (phys.org)
  • This single study does not settle the question of how social bonds form in the wild, which are considered important for animal health, well-being, survival and reproductive success. (phys.org)
  • Several family groups sometimes join together to form a horde of several hundred animals, which keep in contact with a continuous chorus of barks, grunts and crowing calls. (nwf.org)
  • Peregrine falcons form strong pair bonds. (zoonewengland.org)
  • Manoli and Shah focused on understanding the neurobiology and molecular mechanisms of pair bonding because it is thought to hold the key to unlocking better treatments for psychiatric conditions, such as autism and schizophrenia, that interfere with a person's ability to form or maintain social bonds. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • No one believed it because these were small rodents and it was widely accepted that rodents couldn't form pair-bonds and weren't monogamous. (medscape.com)
  • Our study [ 1 ] showed that they did form pair-bonds and they were monogamous, but the monogamy was social. (medscape.com)
  • Marriage may be a consequence of pair bonding and vice versa. (wikipedia.org)
  • Animal Resources Inc. recommends AnimalsVote.org , a not for profit organization dedicated to the belief that the killing and the suffering of animals in deference to our own behest and gratification is an impediment to the moral and social progress of mankind. (animalresourcesinc.com)
  • Pair bonds are a biological phenomenon and are not equivalent to the human social institution of marriage. (wikipedia.org)
  • For example, recent studies show that extra-pair copulation frequently occurs in monogamous birds in which a "social" father provides intensive care for its "social" offspring. (wikipedia.org)
  • Social bonding between randomly assigned college roommates is not only a human phenomenon, a new study on vampire bats suggests. (phys.org)
  • Results showed, based on the overall mean change in social grooming rates, that the forced proximity phase increased social grooming in test pairs more than in control and familiar pairs. (phys.org)
  • Razik noted that many of the new test pairs had done some reciprocal grooming in the first six weeks, but the team focused their analysis on the effect of the randomly assigned forced proximity treatment in shaping lasting social bonds. (phys.org)
  • Antonyms for a solitary animal include a social animal or a colonial animal. (eol.org)
  • Ryne Palombit's research focuses on the extraordinary diversity of social and mating strategies in animals (both human and nonhuman), and how those strategies have evolved. (rutgers.edu)
  • I am studying variation within and between both populations of baboons, collecting genetic, experimental, and observational data that will clarify the causal and functional bases of sexually selected infanticide and heterosexual bonds in a multi-male social setting. (rutgers.edu)
  • Turning a decades-old dogma on its head, new research from scientists at UC San Francisco and Stanford Medicine shows that the receptor for oxytocin, a hormone considered essential to forming social bonds, may not play the critical role that scientists have assigned to it for the past 30 years. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Manoli, who wanted to investigate the neurobiology of social bonding, joined Shah's lab in 2007 as a postdoctoral scholar. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • In biology, a pair bond is the strong affinity that develops in some species between a mating pair, often leading to the production and rearing of offspring and potentially a lifelong bond. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pair-bonding is a term coined in the 1940s that is frequently used in sociobiology and evolutionary biology circles. (wikipedia.org)
  • Mama and Whiskey are a bonded pair and need to be adopted to the same home! (hohanimalrescue.org)
  • Together, our results expand knowledge of the genes involved in the pair bonding process and open new avenues of research in the molecular mechanisms of bond formation. (cdc.gov)
  • But it's clear, Manoli says, that "because of evolution, the parts of the brain and the circuitry that are responsible for pair-bond-formation don't rely [only] on oxytocin. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Pair bonding may also have non-reproductive benefits, such as assisted resource defense. (wikipedia.org)
  • Minnesota sales tax and an administrative fee ($22 for cats and dogs, $5 for all other animals) apply to all adoptions. (animalhumanesociety.org)
  • From a kitten snagging a ride to a another who has figured out how to get her best friend treats, these pairs of cats and dogs make for a good giggle or two. (lifewithcats.tv)
  • The girls are very bonded and cannot be separated, they are not big fans of other cats or dogs but can potentially live with both after careful and slow introductions. (haart.org.au)
  • Only a tiny minority-4,629 at the current count-are mammals, warm-blooded animals that feed their young milk and have hair. (nwf.org)
  • Among mammals, you find a loose correlation between the length of the childhood dependency and the length of the male-female pair-bond. (identitytheory.com)
  • Animal Behaviour 197: 155-167. (slu.se)
  • Given linkages that have been established between temperature and individual behaviour in fish and other animals, we hypothesized that water warming would heighten average individual aggression. (nature.com)
  • The finding that pair bonding occurs without oxytocin came as a surprise to the team who did the experiment. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Sometimes pairing is the only satisfactory solution.This will depend a lot on you and your bird. (animal-world.com)
  • Animal Demography Unit 2019. (eol.org)
  • Comparative neurotranscriptomics reveal widespread species differences associated with bonding. (cdc.gov)
  • It's still a mystery what drives pair-bonding in the absence of oxytocin. (publicradioeast.org)
  • Contact Dermatitis 2005: 53: 189-200 absence of in vivo animal data. (cdc.gov)
  • These animals rely on each other. (wydaily.com)
  • Having a sibling they love and rely on just brings a lot of comfort and solace to an animal," she said. (wydaily.com)
  • They also feed on animal food, especially aquatic insects and mollusks. (outdooralabama.com)
  • The research teams at Georgia Aquarium understand the importance of helping these animals and work diligently to increase our knowledge and understanding of these species to create better conservation practices. (discovery.com)
  • Georgia Aquarium is committed to continuing their work with the endangered species both in their care and in natural habitats, as a part of their mission to inspire awareness and preservation of our ocean and aquatic animals worldwide. (discovery.com)
  • Some animals, when given a choice, show a preference for the same sex, and researchers have even ascribed a same-sex sexual orientation to members of certain species. (popsci.com)
  • Solitary animals are those that spend a majority of their lives without others of their species, with possible exceptions for mating and raising their young. (eol.org)
  • We examined gene expression in the amygdala, hypothalamus, and combined ventral pallidum/nucleus accumbens in virgins and at three time points after mating to understand species differences in gene expression at baseline, in response to mating, and during bond formation. (cdc.gov)
  • Breeding pairs may bond for life or find new mates each year. (si.edu)
  • Once they find a mate, they pair up and live in a harmonious life-long partnership. (animal-world.com)
  • L'équipe Beagle, représentée par Vincent Liard, David Parsons, Jonathan Rouzaud-Cornabas et Guillaume Beslon s'est vue décerner le prix du meilleur article lors de la conférence internationale ALife 2018 (International Conference on Artificial Life) en Juillet 2018 à Tokyo pour leurs travaux sur l'évolution de la complexité. (cnrs.fr)
  • It must have been "bond at first sight" for Charlie and Lizzy, two African penguins at Georgia Aquarium who have been pair-bonded for about 28 years. (discovery.com)
  • He noted that for many people, dogs and other animals can be an important source of physical, emotional, and psychological comfort. (medscape.com)
  • Programs like the Northwest Battle Buddies are important for us to study and better understand the extent to which trained animals are able to help alleviate the symptoms of PTSD and associated disorders and, perhaps most importantly, enhance the ability of service members and veterans to function and live in ways that feel healthy and productive to them," said Morganstein. (medscape.com)
  • Another mouth brooding cichlid - the Lake Tanganyika cichlid (Xenotilapia rotundiventralis) has been shown that mating pairs maintain pair bonds at least until the shift of young from female to male. (wikipedia.org)
  • Male black-throated blue warblers aggressively defend their breeding territories from other males and will pair up with a female during breeding season. (si.edu)
  • Is merely living in close proximity sufficient to become friends, or are bonds formed by giving each other help? (phys.org)
  • It's vital to keep a close eye on them throughout the pairing process as, left unchecked, one or both could be seriously injured. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • Researchers hypothesize that loyalty and bonding are necessary for cordon-bleu pairs to maintain long-term coupling relationships. (mpg.de)
  • Scholarly debate continues on the relative importance of potential causal factors: Are animals drawn to others with similar characteristics, or do opposites attract? (phys.org)
  • Looking for a pair of loving and active dogs to add to your family? (geelonganimalrescue.org.au)
  • It pairs dogs and cheetahs as companions. (chicagotribune.com)
  • There's a much greater chance of a cheetah showing confidence when they're paired with these dogs. (chicagotribune.com)
  • Ryan's wife had heard of a program called Northwest Battle Buddies (NWBB) that pairs professionally trained dogs with veterans struggling with PTSD. (medscape.com)
  • NWBB founder and CEO Shannon Walker, who has been training dogs for 25 years and whose father served in the US Air Force in the 1950s, leads a 5-week training course for the veterans and their "battle buddies" so that the veterans can learn how to bond with and benefit from their new service dogs. (medscape.com)
  • This versatile approach can be used for the quantitative determination of all 12 compounds in experimental animals for toxicological studies. (cdc.gov)
  • More recently the Australian Murray cod has been seen maintaining pair bonds over 3 years. (wikipedia.org)
  • For this study, 15 years in the making, the two applied new genetic technologies to confirm if oxytocin binding to its receptor was indeed the factor behind pair bonding. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Here is what I am looking, This stunning pair of long hairs are light chocolate/cream Charlotte, 8 years, 15 pounds and black/tan silver, Meet Petra! (newideas.net)
  • However, there is limited research on the advantages of long-term pair boding and increased fitness. (wikipedia.org)
  • In view of the forthcoming European Union ban on in vivo testing of cosmetic and toiletry ingredients, following the publication of the 7th amendment to the Cosmetics Directive, the search for practical, alternative, non-animal approaches is gathering pace. (cdc.gov)
  • We use an extensive network of foster homes to care for the animals until we can find them a forever home. (petfinder.com)
  • Before this time, as well as after-that is, when her eggs are not ripe, and again after his genes are safely tucked away inside the shells-he goes seeking extra-pair copulations with the mates of other males…who, of course, are busy with defensive mate-guarding of their own. (wikipedia.org)
  • Winter is the best time of year to bond, because hormones are less of a factor. (rabbitwelfare.co.uk)
  • This overturns conventional wisdom about lactation and oxytocin that's existed for a much longer time than the pair bonding association," said Shah. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • During that time, she said they become like security blankets for each other and if one pet were taken from a bonded pair, it could be detrimental to their well being. (wydaily.com)
  • They line their nests with soft materials including fine grasses, animal wool and feathers. (si.edu)