Abstract
AbstractWhen foraging, animals combine internal cues and sensory input from their environment to guide sequences of behavioral actions. Drosophila larva executes crawls, turns, and pauses to explore the substrate and find food sources. This exploration has to be flexible in the face of changes in the quality of food so that larvae feed in patches with favorable food and look for another source when the current location does not fulfill their nutritional needs. But which behavioral elements adapt, and what triggers those changes remain elusive. Using experiments and modeling, we investigate the foraging behavior of larvae in homogeneous environments with different food types and in environments where the food sources are patchy. Our work indicates that the speed of larval crawling and frequency of pauses is modulated by the food quality. Interestingly, we found that the genetic dimorphism in the foraging gene influences the exploratory behavior only when larvae crawl on yeast patches. While in a homogeneous substrate larvae maintain a turning bias in a specific orientation, in a patchy substrate larvae orient themselves towards the food when the patch border is reached. Therefore, by adapting different elements in their foraging behavior, larvae either increase the time inside nutritious food patches or continue exploring the substrate in less nutritious environments.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory