Journal
JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue -, Pages 20-29Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2017.08.011
Keywords
Drosophila melanogaster; Adult foraging assay; Food deprivation; Food search; Ingestion; Thigmotaxis
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Funding
- National Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
- Ontario Graduate Scholarship
- NSERC USRA studentship
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We introduce a high-resolution adult foraging assay (AFA) that relates pre- and post-ingestive walking behavior to individual instances of food consumption. We explore the utility of the AFA by taking advantage of established rover and sitter strains known to differ in a number of feeding-related traits. The AFA allows us to effectively distinguish locomotor behavior in Fed and Food-Deprived (FD) rover and sitter foragers. We found that rovers exhibit more exploratory behavior into the center of an arena containing sucrose drops compared to sitters who hug the edges of the arena and exhibit thigmotaxic behavior. Rovers also discover and ingest more sucrose drops than sitters. Sitters become more exploratory with increasing durations of food deprivation and the number of ingestion events also increases progressively with prolonged fasting for both strains. AFA results are matched by strain differences in sucrose responsiveness, starvation resistance, and lipid levels, suggesting that under the same feeding condition, rovers are more motivated to forage than sitters. These findings demonstrate the AFA's ability to effectively discriminate movement and food ingestion patterns of different strains and feeding treatments.
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