Abstract

The absence of population specificity of taste spectra in fish was confirmed. It was found that the three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus of populations of the North (Norway), Baltic (Latvia), and Okhotsk (Kamchatka Peninsula) seas has similar taste preferences to classical taste substances (sodium chloride, calcium chloride, and sucrose—10%; citric acid—5%) and to 21 free amino acids (L-isomers, 0.1–0.001 M). For fish of all populations, glutamine, glutamic and aspartic acids, and alanine have the most attractive taste; cysteine, asparagine, and histidine have slightly less attractive taste. In Baltic Sea and Sea of Okhotsk sticklebacks, relatively not numerous amino acids that cause a significant decrease in pellet consumption—phenylalanine, tryptophane, leucine, and tyrosine—coincide (in the North Sea stickleback, substances with deterrent taste were not revealed). In sticklebacks of different populations, no differences in manifestation of feeding behavior were found, and correlations between different elements of fish response to pellets are similar or close the same. It was shown that intraoral sensory testing of food objects in three-spined stickleback can proceed along two alternative behavioral stereotypes similar in fish of the studied populations. The dependence of stereotypes of intraoral testing on taste qualities of the food object was revealed for the first time.

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