17 Foraging in Flies and Worms
Abstract
What do we mean by foraging? Here we use foraging to encompass food-related behaviors. This includes animal responses to food and food-derived cues, and patterns of food intake. Many of the challenges associated with foraging by Drosophila and Caenorhabditis are general. For example, in both organisms foraging is affected by environmental factors such as food quality, distribution, and abundance; smell; taste; and intra-and inter-species competition. Recognizing this complexity lays the groundwork for thinking about the neurobiology of foraging. By neurobiology of foraging we mean the circuits and molecules regulating foraging and how these features respond to ever-changing environments internal and external to the animal.
FORAGING IN C. ELEGANS
C. elegans (Fig. 1) is a free-living nematode that lives at the air/water interface in decaying organic matter. It feeds on...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.437-466