Conditions of rearing pups at an early age render a significant impact on subsequent development, reproduction and certain features of the behavior of mammals including rodents. Parents, mostly lactating females, are the main component of the social environment of pups at the early period of postnatal ontogenesis in most mammal species. Therefore, rearing pups in foster families of their own (in-fostering) or another, even taxonomically distant species (cross-fostering) is one of the main methods of assessing the impact of early experience and maternal environment on the development of animal behavior. Cross-fostering or in-fostering is also used for the conservation of valuable animal species. Therefore, more effective fostering methods that provide the maximum survival of the young are necessary to be developed. According to this, we investigated the survival and possible causes of the mortality of rodent pups representing several species in foster families of their own or another mammal species. We conducted a series of experiments on the cross-fostering and in-fostering of house (Mus musculus) and mound-building (Mus spicilegus) mice, yellow steppe lemmings (Eolagurus luteus) and brown rats (Rattus norvegicus), and on rearing rat pups in foster families of the European polecat (Mustela putorius). The proportion of successfully cross-fostered pups (0–68.4) was lower compared to the in-fostered (93.3–100) ones. This result is presumably explained by more significant differences in the maternal environment when reared by a heterospecific female. According to the literature data, the age of foster and recipient female pups, species-specific differences of odor, the presence or absence of a male and the level of paternal care, the level of stress of the mother and offspring, the expression of maternal instinct, the previous female experience in rearing its own and foster pups, the duration of lactation and the nutritional value of maternal milk are the factors that seem to affect the survival and mortality of foster pups.
For the first time, it was shown that activation of the pituitary-testicular complex in male house mice exposed to the odor of receptive females of their own and closely related species was modified under the influence of early postnatal experience and the maternal environment. We have confirmed associated formation of behavioral and physiological mechanisms of precopulatory isolation in early ontogenesis. The serum levels of free testosterone in males of closely related species M. spicilegus and M. m. wagneri differ, it is significantly lower in mound-building mice. In males fostered by a conspecific female, the level of free testosterone was significantly lower when exposed to a heterospecific female odor in comparison with a conspecific odor. The rearing of M. m. wagneri males by females of a closely related species led to a decrease in the testosterone response caused by exposure to female chemosignals (both con- and heterospecific) and to the absence of differences in the serum level of free testosterone when exposed to the odor of a female of their own or closely related species. These results indicate that the rearing conditions had a significant influence on the formation of hormonal mechanisms of reproductive isolation.