DescriptionParasite140002-fig2 Gastrointestinal parasites and self-medication in ruminants.jpg
English: A conceptual representation of how pre- and post-ingestive events control the manifestation of self-medicative behavior in mammalian herbivores.
Self-medication emerges from enhanced neophilia and increased acceptance of certain somatosensations (e.g., taste dimensions, tactile properties) triggered by parasitism. These increases in neophilia and acceptability, together with social learning, should “prime” animals to ingest therapeutic doses of medicinal secondary compounds (pre-ingestive processes). Subsequently, associative learning (i.e., associations between orosensorial properties of a medicinal food and relief experienced after ingesting that food) will maintain and/or reinforce self-medicative behaviors. Thus, a chain of events starting with food acceptability and social learning followed by post-ingestive processes may contribute to the emergence of self-medication in mammalian herbivores.
Date
Source
Villalba, J. J., Miller, J., Ungar, E. D., Landau, S. Y. & Glendinning, J. 2014: Ruminant self-medication against gastrointestinal nematodes: evidence, mechanism, and origins. Parasite, 21, 31. doi:10.1051/parasite/2014032
Author
Juan J. Villalba, James Miller, Eugene D. Ungar, Serge Y. Landau and John Glendinning
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This file was published in the scientific journal Parasite. Their website states that all content of the journal including and after 2013 is published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.