Close Menu
Live Media NewsLive Media News
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Auto
  • Sports
  • Travel
What's Hot

How to Unlock Early Retirement in Greece: The Favorable Regime That Lowers Your Exit Age by Up to 10 Years

27 April 2026

Why the Athens Stock Exchange Rally Is Different This Time — According to the Analysts Who Called the Last One

27 April 2026

The Fuel Pass That Expired Before It Could Help: Why Greek Drivers Are Furious at the Government

27 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Tuesday, April 28
Contact
News in your area
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram TikTok
  •  Weather
  •  Markets
Live Media NewsLive Media News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Auto
  • Sports
  • Travel
Live Media NewsLive Media News
  • Greece
  • Politics
  • World
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Travel
Home»eco
eco

Paternal Behavior, Mapped: What a Mouse Study Reveals About Biology and Society

News TeamBy News Team10 March 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News
Paternal Behavior, Mapped
Paternal Behavior, Mapped
Share
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Email

Observing a mouse father hover over his pups has a strangely intimate quality. The animal bends slightly and presses its body over the small pile of squeaking newborns in a lab cage lit by soft fluorescent light. This is referred to by scientists as “huddling.” It looks almost like tenderness. For many years, scientists believed that this kind of behavior was primarily learned and that an animal raised by watchful parents would just repeat the pattern. However, a more subdued and unusual possibility is being raised by recent experiments. The body may already bear some signs of fatherhood.

The California mouse, a species that scientists find exceptionally cooperative, was the starting point for the study. These mice form monogamous pairs and raise their young together, in contrast to many rodents. It is difficult to ignore the fathers’ involvement when observing them in a lab setting—nest materials strewn all over the cage, pups wriggling beneath warm fur. They groom. They pick up stray puppies. They both have to put in a lot of effort to keep delicate newborns alive.

CategoryDetails
Research TopicBiological and genetic foundations of paternal behavior
Species StudiedCalifornia mouse (Peromyscus californicus) and related species
Key ResearchersHopi Hoekstra, Andrés Bendesky, Kristin Stanford
InstitutionsHarvard University; Ohio State University
Key Hormone/GeneVasopressin pathway influencing parental behavior
Major FindingPaternal care behaviors can pass across generations through biological and epigenetic mechanisms
Published InNature, Diabetes, and related scientific journals
Behavioral Traits StudiedHuddling, grooming, nest-building, retrieving pups
Broader QuestionAre parenting styles learned—or partly written into biology?
Referencehttps://www.nature.com

Researchers were driven by curiosity to pose a straightforward query. Why do some fathers act in this manner while others hardly engage at all?

Hormones appear to play a role in the solution. It turns out that these mice’s nurturing behaviors are sustained by testosterone, the chemical most people associate with aggression or competition. A subtle change occurred when male California mice had their testosterone levels surgically lowered. The fathers continued to exist in the cage and move around, but they stopped providing care. Less huddling. less grooming. a more peaceful distance.

What followed was even more intriguing. Raised normally, their sons later displayed similar behaviors as fathers. Researchers observed recurring behaviors in those second-generation mice as they interacted with their own pups. less grooming. Less huddling. More puppies are being retrieved.

It implies something more profound than copying. Certain behavioral tendencies seem to be inherited through biological pathways, perhaps due to epigenetic modifications that impact gene expression. Fatherhood may, at least partially, pass through molecules.

Hopi Hoekstra, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard, led research that revealed another piece of the puzzle. Two closely related mouse species were compared by her team. The deer mouse is one species that mates with several partners and exhibits minimal paternal care. The other is the oldfield mouse, which lives in monogamous pairs with fathers assisting in the upbringing of their young.

The cages appeared similar at first. identical bedding. same food pellets. But behavior told a different story. Fathers of Oldfield mice constructed nests and watched over their young just as often as mothers. Fathers of deer mice seldom bothered.

Shortly after birth, researchers switched pups between species to see if upbringing could account for the difference. Babies of deer mice were raised by caring oldfield parents. Deer mouse parents who were less attentive raised Oldfield pups. It seemed clear what was expected. Behavior would be shaped by experience.

Rather, the outcomes were almost unyieldingly biological. Those swapped pups did not behave like the people who raised them; instead, they behaved like members of their genetic species when they grew up and became parents. Fathers of deer mice continued to shun childcare. Fathers from Oldfield continued to lean in.

Although the precise number of genes influencing these patterns is still unknown, one hormone pathway—vasopressin—stands out. Mammals’ social behavior and bonding are already known to be impacted by the chemical. It seems related to nest-building and parental involvement in these mice. In experiments, parenting behaviors changed significantly when researchers increased vasopressin activity. Nests evolved. Patterns of care shifted.

Observing this in quiet animal rooms and lab notebooks gives one the impression that biology may have a greater influence on family life than previously thought. However, the narrative doesn’t stop there.

Another study at Ohio State University looked at the potential effects of a father’s lifestyle on his children’s health. When male mice were put on exercise wheels and allowed to run freely at night, their offspring had better metabolic health. improved metabolism of glucose. Lower fat mass. even though those fathers had been consuming diets heavy in fat.

The process seems to be connected to tiny RNA molecules found in sperm, which have the ability to change how genes are expressed in the following generation. To put it another way, a father’s actions, even something as simple as running on a wheel, can affect how his kids’ bodies metabolize sugar.

It’s an odd notion. The biology of unborn pups may already be being shaped by a father mouse jogging in a quiet lab at midnight.

It is important to exercise caution when applying these findings to humans. Mice just lack the layers of culture, psychology, and social structure that humans possess. However, there are concerns about the similarities.

Researchers are beginning to believe that paternal influence has been undervalued. Mothers—pregnancy, maternal bonding, and maternal care—were a major focus of parenting studies for many years. Fathers were frequently mentioned in scientific literature’s margins. That opinion might be shifting.

It’s difficult to ignore how these mouse experiments resemble well-known arguments concerning parenting approaches. Some people think that experience is the only way to learn nurturing behavior. Others believe that biology subtly encourages us to play particular roles. The truth might lie in the middle. It appears that genes set the stage. The details are filled in by experience.

It becomes more difficult to distinguish between those forces when one is standing in a lab with cages lining the walls and tiny animals rustling softly in the bedding. Beneath behavior, biology hums softly. The rest is shaped by the environment. And fatherhood emerges somewhere between molecules and memory.

Follow Live Media News on Google News

Get Live Media News headlines in your feed — and add Live Media News as a preferred source in Google Search.

Stay updated

Follow Live Media News in Google News for faster access to breaking coverage, reporting, and analysis.

Follow on Google News Add to Preferred Sources
How to add Live Media News as a preferred source (Google Search):
  1. Search any trending topic on Google (for example: Greece news).
  2. On the results page, find the Top stories section.
  3. Tap Preferred sources and select Live Media News.
Tip: You can manage preferred sources anytime from Google Search settings.
30 seconds Following takes one tap inside Google News.
Preferred Sources Helps Google show more Live Media News stories in Top stories for you.
Mapped Paternal Behavior

Keep Reading

The Language of Whales: How AI is Finally Helping Us Decode Cetacean Communication

The Global Movement to Regulate Artificial Intelligence

The Heart of the Milky Way: What ALMA’s Unprecedented Image Reveals About the Birth of Stars

Nikkei Index Today: Why Japan’s Market Suddenly Looks Nervous Again

The Desertification of Europe: Why Spain and Italy Are Drying Up at an Unprecedented Rate

Broadcom Stock Surged for Years. Now Investors Are Asking a Harder Question.

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

Why the Athens Stock Exchange Rally Is Different This Time — According to the Analysts Who Called the Last One

27 April 2026

The Fuel Pass That Expired Before It Could Help: Why Greek Drivers Are Furious at the Government

27 April 2026

Why Microsoft Stock Barely Flinched After the Publicis Deal Surprised Madison Avenue

27 April 2026

Inside the Los Angeles County Tax Collector’s Office: Where Billions Quietly Move Each Year

27 April 2026

Latest Articles

The 300,000 Worker Shortage That Is Quietly Becoming Greece’s Most Serious Economic Problem

23 April 2026

The Ionian Sea Drilling Agreement That Could Change Greece’s Energy Future — and Its Relationship with Turkey

23 April 2026

Akron Community Pharmacy Investment: How a Shuttered Rite Aid Became a Small-Town Lifeline

23 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 Live Media News. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?