Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, 4-5-7 Konan, Minato, Tokyo 108-8477, Japan.
Nat Prod Rep. 2017 May 10;34(5):514-528. doi: 10.1039/c6np00121a.
Benthic marine invertebrates sense molecules from other organisms and use these molecules to find and evaluate the organisms as sources of food. These processes depend on the detection and discrimination of molecules carried in sea water around and in the mouths of these animals. To understand these processes, researchers have studied how molecules released from food distribute in the sea water as a plume, how animals respond to the plume, the molecular identity of the attractants in the plume, the effect of turbulence on food-searching success, and how animals evaluate the quality of food and make decisions to eat or not. This review covers recent progress on this topic involving interdisciplinary studies of natural products chemistry, fluid dynamics, neuroethology, and ecology.
底栖海洋无脊椎动物能够感知来自其他生物的分子,并利用这些分子来寻找和评估这些生物作为食物来源。这些过程依赖于对这些动物周围和口中海水中携带的分子的检测和辨别。为了理解这些过程,研究人员研究了食物释放的分子如何在海水中作为羽流分布,动物如何对羽流做出反应,羽流中的引诱剂的分子特征,湍流对觅食成功的影响,以及动物如何评估食物质量并做出吃或不吃的决定。本综述涵盖了这个主题的最新进展,涉及天然产物化学、流体动力学、神经行为学和生态学的跨学科研究。