Olfactory experience modifies the effect of odour on feeding behaviour in a goal-related manner

Natural food odours elicit different behavioural responses in snails. The tentacle carries an olfactory organ, and it either protracts toward a stimulating carrot odour or retraces in a startle-like fashion away from a cucumber odour. The tentacle retraction to cucumber was still present after the s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Comparative Physiology 2008, Vol.194 (1), p.19-26
Hauptverfasser: Nikitin, E. S, Korshunova, T. A, Zakharov, I. S, Balaban, P. M
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creator Nikitin, E. S
Korshunova, T. A
Zakharov, I. S
Balaban, P. M
description Natural food odours elicit different behavioural responses in snails. The tentacle carries an olfactory organ, and it either protracts toward a stimulating carrot odour or retraces in a startle-like fashion away from a cucumber odour. The tentacle retraction to cucumber was still present after the snails were fed cucumber during inter-trial periods. Also, snails without any food experience displayed a longer latency to the first bite of cucumber than of carrot and rejected cucumber more often. After tasting these foods, the latency to carrot was not affected while the latency to and number of rejections of cucumber decreased. These results suggest that initial repulsive features of food odour can be only partially compensated by olfactory learning and feeding experience. In the present study, we demonstrated that an invertebrate can be repulsed or attracted by the same natural odour at the same time and that these behavioural responses are likely aimed at achieving different physiologically relevant goals.
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subjects Animal Physiology
Animals
Association Learning - physiology
Avoidance Learning - physiology
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Conditioning, Classical - physiology
Cucumbers
Daucus
Feeding Behavior - physiology
Food Preferences - physiology
Goals
Helix (Snails) - physiology
Life Sciences
Neurosciences
Original Paper
Reaction Time - physiology
Receptors, Odorant - physiology
Recognition (Psychology) - physiology
Sense Organs - physiology
Smell - physiology
Zoology
title Olfactory experience modifies the effect of odour on feeding behaviour in a goal-related manner
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