Wernecke Kerstin E A, Brüggemann Judith, Fendt Markus
Institute for Pharmacology and Toxicology, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany; Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany.
Integrative Neurocience Program, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany.
Physiol Behav. 2016 Feb 1;154:15-9. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2015.11.005. Epub 2015 Nov 7.
To cover their energy demands, prey animals are forced to search for food. However, during foraging they also expose themselves to the risk of becoming the prey of predators. Consequently, in order to increase their fitness foraging animals have to trade-off efficiency of foraging against the avoidance of predation risk. For example, the decision on whether a found food piece should be eaten at the food source or whether it should be carried to a protective site such as the nest (food-carrying behavior), is strongly dependent on different incentive factors (e.g., hunger level, food size, distance to the nest). It has been shown that food-carrying behavior increases the more risky the foraging situation becomes. Since predator odors are clearly fear-inducing in rats, we ask here whether the detection of predator odors in close proximity to the food source modulates food-carrying behavior. In the present study, the food-carrying behavior of rats for six different food pellet sizes was measured in a "low risk" and a "high risk" testing condition by presenting water or a fox urine sample, respectively, next to the food source. For both testing conditions, food-carrying behavior of rats increased with increasing food pellet weight. Importantly, the proportion of food-carrying rats was significantly higher during exposure to fox urine ("high risk") than when rats were tested with the water control ("low risk"). Taken together, these results demonstrate that food-carrying behavior of rats is increased by the detection of a predator odor. Our data also support the idea that such food-carrying behavior can be considered as a pre-encounter defensive response.
为了满足能量需求,被捕食动物不得不寻找食物。然而,在觅食过程中,它们也面临着成为捕食者猎物的风险。因此,为了提高自身适应性,觅食动物必须在觅食效率和避免被捕食风险之间进行权衡。例如,关于发现的食物块是应该在食物源处吃掉还是应该带回诸如巢穴这样的保护地点(携带食物行为)的决定,很大程度上取决于不同的激励因素(例如,饥饿程度、食物大小、到巢穴的距离)。研究表明,觅食情况越危险,携带食物的行为就越频繁。由于捕食者气味在大鼠中明显会引发恐惧,我们在此探讨在食物源附近检测到捕食者气味是否会调节携带食物的行为。在本研究中,通过在食物源旁边分别提供水或狐狸尿液样本,在“低风险”和“高风险”测试条件下测量了大鼠针对六种不同食物颗粒大小的携带食物行为。对于这两种测试条件,大鼠的携带食物行为都随着食物颗粒重量的增加而增加。重要的是,在接触狐狸尿液(“高风险”)期间,携带食物的大鼠比例显著高于用水作为对照进行测试时(“低风险”)。综上所述,这些结果表明,检测到捕食者气味会增加大鼠的携带食物行为。我们的数据还支持这样一种观点,即这种携带食物的行为可以被视为一种遭遇前的防御反应。