Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ri.uaemex.mx/handle20.500.11799/110059
Title: Congenital feeding response to a novel prey in a Mexican gartersnake
Keywords: Neonates;Thamnophis;Crayfish;Chemosensory response;Ingestive response;Feeding niche;Behavioral response;info:eu-repo/classification/cti/5
Publisher: PeerJ
Project: 10.7717/peerj.8718 
Description: Articulo de investigación científica publicado en revista indizada
In this study, we explored chemosensory, ingestive and prey-catching responses of neonate Mexican Black-bellied Gartersnakes (Thamnophis melanogaster) to crayfish (Cambarellus montezumae). By comparing snakes from a recently discovered crayfisheating population and a typical non-crayfish-eating population, we asked which behavioral components change as a species enlarges its feeding niche. In the crayfisheating population chemosensory responsiveness to crayfish was not enhanced but its heritability was higher. Neonates of both populations showed similar preference for freshly-molted versus unmolted crayfish, and whereas the tendency to ingest both crayfish stages remained stable between ages 15 and 90 days in the non-crayfisheating population, in the crayfish-eating population it actually decreased. Techniques to catch and manipulate molted crayfish were similar in the two populations. We discuss the possibility that there is no increase in the behavioral response to eat crayfish by the neonates of the crayfish-eating populations, possibly due to the absence of ecological and spatial isolation between the two T. melanogaster populations. The crayfish ingestion in some population of T. melanogaster can be explained by environmental differences between populations, or by recent origin of crayfish ingestion in T. melanogaster.
Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México (3589/2013SF, 4047/2016SF, 4865/2019SF).
URI: http://ri.uaemex.mx/handle20.500.11799/110059
Other Identifiers: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11799/110059
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
Appears in Collections:Producción

Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.