Litcius/Paper detail

Inversion of pheromone preference optimizes foraging in C. elegans

Martina Dal Bello, Alfonso Pérez‐Escudero, Frank C. Schroeder, Jeff Gore

2021eLife25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Foraging animals have to locate food sources that are usually patchily distributed and subject to competition. Deciding when to leave a food patch is challenging and requires the animal to integrate information about food availability with cues signaling the presence of other individuals (e.g., pheromones). To study how social information transmitted via pheromones can aid foraging decisions, we investigated the behavioral responses of the model animal Caenorhabditis elegans to food depletion and pheromone accumulation in food patches. We experimentally show that animals consuming a food patch leave it at different times and that the leaving time affects the animal preference for its pheromones. In particular, worms leaving early are attracted to their pheromones, while worms leaving later are repelled by them. We further demonstrate that the inversion from attraction to repulsion depends on associative learning and, by implementing a simple model, we highlight that it is an adaptive solution to optimize food intake during foraging.

Topics & Concepts

ForagingSex pheromoneAttractionPheromoneCaenorhabditis elegansBiologyEcologyFeeding behaviorOptimal foraging theoryAssociative learningZoologyCommunicationNeurosciencePsychologyGeneticsPhilosophyLinguisticsGeneGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationEvolution and Genetic Dynamics
Inversion of pheromone preference optimizes foraging in C. elegans | Litcius