Author:
Derby Charles D.,Steullet Pascal,Horner Amy J.,Cate Holly S.
Abstract
A complex nervous system enables spiny lobsters to have a rich behavioural
repertoire. The present paper discusses the ways in which the sensory systems
of the Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus,
particularly its chemosensory systems, are involved in feeding behaviour. It
addresses the neural mechanisms of three aspects of their food-finding
ability: detection, identification, and discrimination of natural food odours;
the effect of learning on responses to food odours; the mechanisms by which
spiny lobsters orient to odours from a distance under natural flow conditions.
It demonstrates that the olfactory organ of spiny lobsters might use
acrossneuron response patterns in discriminating odour quality; that the
hedonic value of food can be modified by experience, including associative and
nonassociative conditioning; that spiny lobsters can readily orient to distant
odour sources; and that both chemo- and mechanosensory antennular input are
important in this behaviour. Either aesthetasc or nonaesthetasc chemosensory
pathways can be used in identifying odour quality, mediating learned
behaviours, and permitting orientation to the source of distant odours.
Studying the neuroethology of feeding behaviour helps us understand how spiny
lobsters are adapted to living in complex and variable environments.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
89 articles.
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