Roper TJ, Marples NM
School of Biological Sciences, University of Sussex
Anim Behav. 1997 Jun;53(6):1241-50. doi: 10.1006/anbe.1996.0384.
In addition to being visually conspicuous, many chemically defended insects also produce olfactants when attacked. These olfactants may constitute 'warning odours', comparable in their effects to warning colours. This hypothesis was tested by examining the ability of two odours, almond and vanilla, to act as cues for avoidance of quinine-flavoured water in domestic chicks, Gallus gallus domesticusIn experiment 1, chicks were trained to avoid familiar-coloured quinine solution, novel-coloured solution, or novel-smelling solution. When the novel smell was almond it enhanced the rate of avoidance learning, as did the novel colour cue; but vanilla odour had no effect on rate of learning. In experiment 2, chicks were trained to avoid quinine solution that was paired with a compound cue involving both colour and odour. They were then tested in extinction with both cues, either cue alone, or neither cue. When the odour cue was almond it overshadowed the colour cue: chicks that had learned to avoid almond-smelling quinine solution of a particular colour subsequently avoided almond-smelling water and drank water that did not smell of almond, regardless of its colour. Vanilla odour, by contrast, exerted no control over behaviour when paired with a colour cue during acquisition. In experiment 3, chicks were trained to discriminate palatable from quinine-flavoured water when the latter was distinguished solely by an odour cue. The discrimination was learned more readily when the cue was almond than when it was vanilla; and a memory test revealed significant avoidance of almond odour, but not of vanilla, after 24 h. We conclude that odours can act as discriminative stimuli for taste-avoidance learning in birds and that they can sometimes exert more powerful control over behaviour than do visual cues. However, not all odours are equally efficacious. The results are discussed in relation to aposematism and mimicry.
除了在视觉上引人注目外,许多具有化学防御能力的昆虫在受到攻击时还会产生嗅觉物质。这些嗅觉物质可能构成“警告气味”,其作用与警告色类似。通过研究杏仁和香草这两种气味作为家鸡(原鸡)避免饮用奎宁味水的线索的能力,对这一假设进行了测试。
在实验1中,训练小鸡避免饮用熟悉颜色的奎宁溶液、新颜色的溶液或新气味的溶液。当新气味是杏仁味时,它提高了回避学习的速度,新颜色线索也是如此;但香草气味对学习速度没有影响。
在实验2中,训练小鸡避免饮用与颜色和气味复合线索配对的奎宁溶液。然后用两种线索、单独一种线索或两种线索都不用对它们进行消退测试。当气味线索是杏仁味时,它掩盖了颜色线索:那些学会避免特定颜色的杏仁味奎宁溶液的小鸡随后避免饮用杏仁味的水,并饮用没有杏仁味的水,无论其颜色如何。相比之下,香草气味在习得过程中与颜色线索配对时,对行为没有控制作用。
在实验3中,当奎宁味水仅通过气味线索来区分时,训练小鸡区分可口的水和奎宁味的水。当线索是杏仁味时,比线索是香草味时更容易学会这种区分;一项记忆测试显示,24小时后,小鸡明显回避杏仁味,但不回避香草味。
我们得出结论,气味可以作为鸟类味觉回避学习的辨别性刺激,而且它们有时对行为的控制比视觉线索更强大。然而,并非所有气味都同样有效。结合警戒色和拟态对结果进行了讨论。