Responses to major categories of food chemicals by the lizard Podarcis lilfordi |
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Authors: | Cooper William E Pérez-Mellado Valentín Vitt Laurie J |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, Indiana University-Purdue University at Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne, Indiana, 46805;(2) Departamento de Biologia Animal, Universidad de Salamanca, 37071 Salamanca, Spain;(3) Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, and Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma, 2401 Chataqua Avenue, Norman, Oklahoma, 73072-7029 |
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Abstract: | Many lizards are capable of identifying food using only chemical cues from food surfaces, but almost nothing is known about the types of compounds that are effective stimuli. We experimentally studied lingual and biting responses by a lacertid lizard, Podarcis lilfordi, to single representatives of three major categories of food chemicals, sucrose as a carbohydrate, pure pork fat as a mixture of lipids, and bovine gamma globulin as a protein. In 60-sec trials in which stimuli were presented on cotton swabs, the lizards detected all three stimuli, exhibiting more tongue-flicks, licks, or bites, or a greater tongue-flick attack score (TFAS; overall measure of response strength to prey stimuli) than to deionized water. The initial response to all stimuli was tongue-flicking, but the lizards discriminated among the types of chemical stimuli. After preliminary tongue-flicks, the lizards responded to sucrose solutions by licking at high rates, to pure pork fat by biting, and to protein by a combination of additional tongue-flicks and biting. Biting is a feeding response to prey or solid plant material. Licking is a feeding response to sugars in nectar or ripe fruit. Its frequency increased with sucrose concentration. Our data suggest that lizards can identify several types of chemicals associated with food and direct feeding attempts to sources of such chemicals in the absence of visual cues. |
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Keywords: | Behavior chemical senses tongue-flicking food chemicals Squamata Lacertidae Podarcis lilfordi |
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