当生活给你柠檬时,挤一挤就过去了:了解印度自由放养狗躲避柑橘的行为

Tuhin Subhra Pal, Srijaya Nandi, Rohan Sarkar, Anindita Bhadra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

食物的适口性受味道、气味、质地、新鲜度等多种因素的影响,不同物种之间的适口性差异很大。在食物可获得性的驱动下,局部适应导致物种分化的例子比比皆是。世界各地的城市化正在导致生物多样性迅速减少,同时也推动了一些物种的局部适应。它们与人类共存了几个世纪,是研究局部适应性的完美模式系统。我们试图了解它们在印度清道夫行为的一个特定方面:厌恶柑橘。众所周知,宠物狗会避开柑橘类水果和受其污染的食物。在印度,柠檬被广泛用于烹饪,并被丢弃在垃圾中。因此,自由放养的狗通常是人类残羹剩饭的清道夫,很可能会经常遇到柠檬和被柠檬污染的食物。我们进行了一项群体水平的实验,测试散养狗对被柠檬不同部位污染的鸡肉的反应。这些狗最不喜欢吃被柠檬汁污染的鸡肉。此外,当给狗提供蘸有三种不同浓度柠檬汁的鸡肉时,它们最喜欢蘸浓度最低的柠檬汁。调查证实,当地人在饮食中广泛使用柠檬,并将其与剩菜一起丢弃。人们避免给宠物食用受柑橘污染的食物,但对放养的狗却没有采取同样的谨慎态度。这项研究表明,印度西孟加拉邦的放养狗非常适应在受柑橘污染的垃圾中觅食,它们有自己的策略来尽可能避免污染,同时最大限度地摄入自己喜欢的食物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When Life Gives You Lemons, Squeeze Your Way Through: Understanding Citrus Avoidance Behaviour by Free-Ranging Dogs in India
Palatability of food is driven by multiple factors like taste, smell, texture, freshness, etc. and can be very variable across species. There are classic examples of local adaptations leading to speciation, driven by food availability. Urbanization across the world is causing rapid decline of biodiversity, while also driving local adaptations in some species. Free-ranging dogs are an interesting example of adaptation to a human-dominated environment across varied habitats. They have co-existed with humans for centuries and are a perfect model system for studying local adaptations. We attempted to understand a specific aspect of their scavenging behaviour in India: citrus aversion. Pet dogs are known to avoid citrus fruits and food contaminated by them. In India, lemons are used widely in the cuisine, and discarded in the garbage. Hence, free-ranging dogs, that typically are scavengers of human leftovers, are likely to encounter lemons and lemon-contaminated food on a regular basis. We carried out a population level experiment to test response of free-ranging dogs to chicken contaminated with various parts of lemon. The dogs avoided chicken contaminated with lemon juice the most. Further, when provided with chicken dipped in three different concentrations of lemon juice, the lowest concentration was most preferred. A survey confirmed that the local people use lemon in their diet extensively and also discard these with the leftovers. People avoided giving citrus contaminated food to their pets but did not follow the same caution for free-ranging dogs. This study revealed that free-ranging dogs in West Bengal, India, are well adapted to scavenging among citrus-contaminated garbage and have their own strategies to avoid the contamination as far as possible, while maximizing their preferred food intake.
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