4.1 Article

Early Exposure to Odors Changes Later Visual Prey Preferences in Cuttlefish

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 8, Pages 833-837

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dev.20470

Keywords

cross-modal effect; invertebrate; chemoreception; predation; sensory development

Funding

  1. Millersville University
  2. Alex Henderson Scholarship
  3. Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education
  4. National Science Foundation [IOB-0414546]
  5. French Ministry of Education

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Developmental studies have shown that environmental stimulation received by a developing sensory system can alter the developmental outcome of both that sensory system and other aspects of the nervous system. We investigated the ecologically relevant question of whether prior exposure to prey early in development within one sensory modality could influence later prey choice within a different sensory modality. Cuttlefish are visual predators; they can detect prey odors but attacks on prey cannot be elicited without visual stimulation. Cuttlefish eggs were exposed to the odor of shrimp (preferred prey), crabs (non-preferred prey), mollusks (non-prey), or a seawater control (no prey). Seven days after hatching, prey preferences were tested with a visual choice test between crabs and shrimp. Hatchlings exposed to crabs odors and the seawater control were significantly more likely to attack shrimp. Hatchlings exposed to mollusk odors showed no visual prey preference, while those exposed to shrimp preferentially attacked crabs. These results demonstrate a complex relationship between an early sensory exposure and later prey preference. (C) 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 52: 833-837, 2010.

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