Lihoreau Mathieu, Poissonnier Laure-Anne, Isabel Guillaume, Dussutour Audrey
Research Center on Animal Cognition (CRCA), Center for Integrative Biology (CBI), Toulouse University, CNRS, UPS, Toulouse 31062, France.
Research Center on Animal Cognition (CRCA), Center for Integrative Biology (CBI), Toulouse University, CNRS, UPS, Toulouse 31062, France
J Exp Biol. 2016 Aug 15;219(Pt 16):2514-24. doi: 10.1242/jeb.142257. Epub 2016 Jun 9.
Animals, from insects to humans, select foods to regulate their acquisition of key nutrients in amounts and balances that maximise fitness. In species in which the nutrition of juveniles depends on parents, adults must make challenging foraging decisions that simultaneously address their own nutrient needs as well as those of their progeny. Here, we examined how the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, a species in which individuals eat and lay eggs in decaying fruits, integrate feeding decisions (individual nutrition) and oviposition decisions (offspring nutrition) when foraging. Using cafeteria assays with artificial diets varying in concentrations and ratios of protein to carbohydrates, we show that D. melanogaster females exhibit complex foraging patterns, alternating between laying eggs on high carbohydrate foods and feeding on foods with different nutrient contents depending on their own nutritional state. Although larvae showed faster development on high protein foods, both survival and learning performance were higher on balanced foods. We suggest that the apparent mismatch between the oviposition preference of females for high carbohydrate foods and the high performances of larvae on balanced foods reflects a natural situation where high carbohydrate ripened fruits gradually enrich in proteinaceous yeast as they start rotting, thereby yielding optimal nutrition for the developing larvae. Our findings that animals with rudimentary parental care uncouple feeding and egg-laying decisions in order to balance their own diet and provide a nutritionally optimal environment to their progeny reveal unsuspected levels of complexity in the nutritional ecology of parent-offspring interactions.
从昆虫到人类,动物会选择食物来调节关键营养素的摄取量和平衡,以实现健康最大化。在幼体营养依赖于亲代的物种中,成年个体必须做出具有挑战性的觅食决策,既要满足自身的营养需求,也要满足后代的营养需求。在此,我们研究了果蝇(Drosophila melanogaster)这种在腐烂水果中进食和产卵的物种,在觅食时如何整合进食决策(个体营养)和产卵决策(后代营养)。通过使用含有不同蛋白质与碳水化合物浓度和比例的人工饲料的自助餐试验,我们发现黑腹果蝇雌性个体表现出复杂的觅食模式,根据自身营养状态,它们会在高碳水化合物食物上产卵与取食不同营养成分的食物之间交替。尽管幼虫在高蛋白食物上发育更快,但在营养均衡的食物上,其存活率和学习能力表现更高。我们认为,雌性个体对高碳水化合物食物的产卵偏好与幼虫在营养均衡食物上的高表现之间明显的不匹配,反映了一种自然情况:高碳水化合物成熟果实开始腐烂时会逐渐富含蛋白质酵母,从而为发育中的幼虫提供最佳营养。我们的研究结果表明,亲代抚育行为基本的动物会分开进食和产卵决策,以平衡自身饮食并为后代提供营养最优的环境,这揭示了亲子互动营养生态学中意想不到的复杂程度。