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- W3169482928 abstract "Aggressive interactions are costly, such that individuals should display modified aggression in response to environmental stress. Many organisms experience frequent periods of food deprivation, which can influence an individual's capacity and motivation to engage in aggression. However, because food deprivation can simultaneously decrease an individual's resource-holding potential and increase its valuation of food resources, its net impact on aggression is unclear. Here, we tested the influence of increasingly prolonged periods of adult food deprivation on intermale aggression in pairs of fruit flies, Drosophila melanogaster. We found that males displayed increased aggression following periods of food deprivation longer than a day. Increased aggression in food-deprived flies occurred despite their reduced mass. This result is probably explained by an increased attraction to food resources, as food deprivation increased male occupancy of central food patches, and food patch occupancy was positively associated with aggression. Our findings demonstrate that aggressive strategies in male D. melanogaster are influenced by nutritional experience, highlighting the need to consider past nutritional stresses to understand variation in aggression." @default.
- W3169482928 created "2021-06-22" @default.
- W3169482928 creator A5021681599 @default.
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- W3169482928 date "2021-07-01" @default.
- W3169482928 modified "2023-10-11" @default.
- W3169482928 title "‘Hangry’ Drosophila: food deprivation increases male aggression" @default.
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- W3169482928 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.05.001" @default.
- W3169482928 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/8274700" @default.
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- W3169482928 hasPublicationYear "2021" @default.
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