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Phenotypic transformation affects associative learning in the desert locust

journal contribution
posted on 2014-11-13, 15:59 authored by Patrıcio M. V. Simoes, Jeremy E. Niven, Swidbert R. Ott
In desert locusts, increased population densities drive phenotypic transformation from the solitarious to the gregarious phase within a generation [1-4]. Here we show that when presented with odor-food associations, the two extreme phases differ in aversive but not appetitive associative learning, with solitarious locusts showing a conditioned aversion more quickly than gregarious locusts. The acquisition of new learned aversions was blocked entirely in acutely crowded solitarious (transiens) locusts, whereas appetitive learning and prior learned associations were unaffected. These differences in aversive learning support phase-specific feeding strategies. Associative training with hyoscyamine, a plant alkaloid found in the locusts' habitat [5, 6], elicits a phase-dependent odor preference: solitarious locusts avoid an odor associated with hyoscyamine, whereas gregarious locusts do not. Remarkably, when solitarious locusts are crowded and then reconditioned with the odor-hyoscyamine pairing as transiens, the specific blockade of aversive acquisition enables them to override their prior aversive memory with an appetitive one. Under fierce food competition, as occurs during crowding in the field, this provides a neuroecological mechanism enabling locusts to reassign an appetitive value to an odor that they learned previously to avoid.

History

Citation

Current Biology, 2013, 23 (23), pp. 2407-2412

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Biological Sciences/Department of Biology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Current Biology

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0960-9822

eissn

1879-0445

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2014-11-13

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982213012578

Language

en

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