Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.

In chicken, oils in the maternal diet confer a specific scent to the yolk. Embryos are known to perceive and memorize chemosensory signals of the surrounding environment; however, the potential impact of the maternal diet has not previously been investigated. In the present study, we hypothesized th...

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Main Authors: Nadège Aigueperse, Ludovic Calandreau, Aline Bertin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812276?pdf=render
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author Nadège Aigueperse
Ludovic Calandreau
Aline Bertin
author_facet Nadège Aigueperse
Ludovic Calandreau
Aline Bertin
author_sort Nadège Aigueperse
collection DOAJ
description In chicken, oils in the maternal diet confer a specific scent to the yolk. Embryos are known to perceive and memorize chemosensory signals of the surrounding environment; however, the potential impact of the maternal diet has not previously been investigated. In the present study, we hypothesized that chicken embryos memorize the chemical signals of the maternal diet and that this perceptual learning may orient subsequent feeding behavior of the hatchlings.Laying hens were fed standard food enriched with 2% menhaden oil (MH group) or 2% soybean oil (controls). The scent of menhaden was significantly more detected in MH egg yolks than in control yolks by a human panel. We analyzed the development and behavior of offspring towards different types of food, bearing or not bearing the menhaden scent. When chicks were exposed to a 3-min choice test between the familiar food bearing the menhaden scent and the familiar food without menhaden, no effect of treatment was observed. In a 3-min choice test with unfamiliar food (mashed cereals) MH chicks showed a clear positive orientation toward the unfamiliar food bearing the menhaden scent. By contrast, control chicks showed a preference for the non-odorized unfamiliar food. MH chicks expressed higher emotional reactivity level than control chicks as expressed by food neophobia and longer immobility in a restraint test.Chicks exposed in ovo to menhaden oil via the maternal diet preferentially oriented their feeding behavior towards food containing menhaden oil, but only when the food was unfamiliar. We propose that oil in the maternal diet engenders maternal effects and contributes to the development of behavioral phenotype in the offspring. In ovo chemosensory learning may have evolved to prepare precocial offspring for their environment. This suggests a common principle of embryonic chemosensory learning across vertebrate taxa.
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spelling doaj.art-50ce41f64c2442a38b7e768155a1092a2022-12-21T17:48:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01810e7758310.1371/journal.pone.0077583Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.Nadège AigueperseLudovic CalandreauAline BertinIn chicken, oils in the maternal diet confer a specific scent to the yolk. Embryos are known to perceive and memorize chemosensory signals of the surrounding environment; however, the potential impact of the maternal diet has not previously been investigated. In the present study, we hypothesized that chicken embryos memorize the chemical signals of the maternal diet and that this perceptual learning may orient subsequent feeding behavior of the hatchlings.Laying hens were fed standard food enriched with 2% menhaden oil (MH group) or 2% soybean oil (controls). The scent of menhaden was significantly more detected in MH egg yolks than in control yolks by a human panel. We analyzed the development and behavior of offspring towards different types of food, bearing or not bearing the menhaden scent. When chicks were exposed to a 3-min choice test between the familiar food bearing the menhaden scent and the familiar food without menhaden, no effect of treatment was observed. In a 3-min choice test with unfamiliar food (mashed cereals) MH chicks showed a clear positive orientation toward the unfamiliar food bearing the menhaden scent. By contrast, control chicks showed a preference for the non-odorized unfamiliar food. MH chicks expressed higher emotional reactivity level than control chicks as expressed by food neophobia and longer immobility in a restraint test.Chicks exposed in ovo to menhaden oil via the maternal diet preferentially oriented their feeding behavior towards food containing menhaden oil, but only when the food was unfamiliar. We propose that oil in the maternal diet engenders maternal effects and contributes to the development of behavioral phenotype in the offspring. In ovo chemosensory learning may have evolved to prepare precocial offspring for their environment. This suggests a common principle of embryonic chemosensory learning across vertebrate taxa.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812276?pdf=render
spellingShingle Nadège Aigueperse
Ludovic Calandreau
Aline Bertin
Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.
PLoS ONE
title Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.
title_full Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.
title_fullStr Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.
title_full_unstemmed Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.
title_short Maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken.
title_sort maternal diet influences offspring feeding behavior and fearfulness in the precocial chicken
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812276?pdf=render
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