## Abstract In various environments where primates are presently observed, as well as in forests and savannas which have been inhabited by australopithecines and early hominids, there are (or there have been presumably) categories of substances eliciting taste signals associated with stereotyped re
Taste difference thresholds for sucrose in two species of nonhuman primates
✍ Scribed by Matthias Laska; Heinz-Peter Scheuber; Edith Carrera Sanchez; Ernesto Rodriguez Luna
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 116 KB
- Volume
- 48
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0275-2565
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The purpose of this study was to determine taste difference thresholds for sucrose in frugivorous spider monkeys and omnivorous baboons. Using a two-bottle preference test of brief duration, we presented four Ateles geoffroyi and four Papio hamdryas anubis with six different reference concentrations (RCs) of 25, 50, 100, 200, 300, and 400 mM sucrose and tested their ability to discriminate these from lower concentrations of this carbohydrate. The just noticeable differences (JNDs), expressed as Weber ratios (delta/I), were found to range from 0.075-0.25 in the spider monkeys, with a tendency for lower values with higher RCs. In contrast, the baboons showed the reverse trend, with the lowest Weber ratio of 0.10 at the two lowest RCs and higher values of up to 0.25 with the highest RC tested. Thus, the JNDs were found to be generally similar in both species and at least as low as in humans. The results support the assumption that both spider monkeys and baboons may use sweetness as a criterion for food selection. The different patterns of differential sensitivity for sucrose across the range of concentrations tested suggest a correlation between the ability to discriminate between different concentrations of sucrose and the dietary habits of the two species.
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