The population peaked at 2,200 – short of the actual 3,000-mouse capacity of the "universe" – and from there came the decline. "We called beautiful ones because not engaging in any stressful activities, and only paying attention to themselves," Calhoun said in footage posted to YouTube, "they looked like very fine specimens," As a result, they never learned usual mice behaviors and many showed little or no interest in mating, preferring to eat and preen themselves, alone. In the phase Calhoun termed the "second death", whatever young mice survived the attacks from their mothers and others would grow up around these unusual mouse behaviors. This was all during the first phase of the downfall of the "utopia". The footage shows many interviews with Calhoun, as well as video of the experiment itself. They never learned to court: there was no mating. "They never learned to be aggressive, which is necessary. "The last 1,000 animals born, never learned to develop the social behaviors," Calourn explained in footage posted to YouTube. This aggression spilled over, and the mothers would regularly kill their young. Infant mortality in some territories of the utopia reached 90 percent. The mother mice also became aggressive towards trespassers to their nests, with males that would normally fill this role banished to other parts of the utopia. Violent encounters sometimes ended in mouse-on-mouse cannibalism.ĭespite – or perhaps because – their every need was being catered for, mothers would abandon their young or merely just forget about them entirely, leaving them to fend for themselves. The "alpha male" mice became extremely aggressive, attacking others with no motivation or gain for themselves, and regularly raped both males and females. The breakdown of usual mouse behavior wasn't just limited to the outsiders. Due to this they had excellent fur coats, and were dubbed, somewhat disconcertingly, the "beautiful ones". The female counterparts of these isolated males withdrew as well. Some mice spent their days preening themselves, shunning mating, and never engaging in fighting. Later on, they would attack others in the same pattern. The withdrawn males would not respond during attacks, lying there immobile. "Even so, they became characterized by many wounds and much scar tissue as a result of attacks by other withdrawn males." From this point on they no longer initiated interaction with their established associates, nor did their behavior elicit attack by territorial males," read the paper. "Males who failed withdrew physically and psychologically they became very inactive and aggregated in large pools near the center of the floor of the universe. The mice that found themself with no social role to fill – there are only so many head mouse roles, and the utopia was in no need of a Ratatouille-esque chef – became isolated. Here, the "excess" could not emigrate, for there was nowhere else to go. "The excess that find no social niches emigrate." "In the normal course of events in a natural ecological setting somewhat more young survive to maturity than are necessary to replace their dying or senescent established associates," Calhoun wrote in 1972. The mice split off into groups, and those that could not find a role in these groups found themselves with nowhere to go. When the population hit 620, that slowed to doubling around every 145 days, as the mouse society began to hit problems. About every 55 days, the population doubled as the mice filled the most desirable space within the pen, where access to the food tunnels was of ease. The experiment began, and as you'd expect, the mice used the time that would usually be wasted in foraging for food and shelter for having excessive amounts of sexual intercourse. It's not often something is described as a "utopia, but also there were lions there picking us all off one by one". As well as this, no predators were present in the utopia, which sort of stands to reason.
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