How does pattern of feeding and rate of nutrient delivery influence conditioned food preferences?

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_CBD29DA141FC
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
How does pattern of feeding and rate of nutrient delivery influence conditioned food preferences?
Journal
Oecologia
Author(s)
Duncan A.J., Elwert C., Villalba J.J., Yearsley J., Pouloupoulou I., Gordon I.J.
ISSN
0029-8549
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2007
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
153
Number
3
Pages
617-624
Language
english
Abstract
Ruminant herbivores have been shown to learn about food properties by associating food flavours with the food's post-ingestive consequences. Previous experimentation supporting the conditioned food aversion/preference hypothesis has generally employed very simple diet learning tasks which do not effectively represent the wide range of foods selected within single bouts typical of wild, free-ranging ruminant herbivores. We tested the ability of a ruminant herbivore to associate a food with artificially administered nutrient rewards in a designed experiment where we altered the temporal pattern of encounter with the food as well as the nature (fast or slow reward) of the post-ingestive outcome. Twenty-four goats were offered branches of Sitka spruce (SS) and Norway spruce (NS) for 4 h per day on two days per week for five weeks. The pattern of feeding varied with treatment such that the species on offer changed every hour (short) or every 2 h (long). The energy treatment altered the reward delivered during Sitka consumption so that animals were dosed either with predominantly sugar (rapidly fermented), predominantly starch (slower fermentation rate), or with water (placebo). Preference was measured on the day following each learning day. We expected that goats would find it easier to associate SS with post-ingestive rewards when the duration of encounter was longest, and that associations would be stronger with the most rapidly digested post-ingestive reward. In the event, goats did not alter their consumption of SS in response to the treatments. Our results suggest that at the scale of temporal resolution of encounters with different plant species (1-2 h), and at the different rates of experiencing post-ingestive consequences tested in this experiment, ruminants do not appear to discriminate the nutritive properties of foods predominantly through a post-ingestive feedback mechanism. They must, instead, use a range of cues-including post-ingestive consequences-to assess food properties.
Keywords
Animal Feed, Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Animals, Carbohydrates, Diet/veterinary, Feeding Behavior/physiology, Fermentation, Food Preferences/physiology, Goats/physiology, Male, Picea, Starch, Time Factors
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
19/11/2007 11:48
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:46
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