Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4523874 | Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2007 | 10 Pages |
Goats were first offered a novel, maple-flavoured diet paired with either lithium chloride (LiCl) or oxalic acid (OA) delivered intraruminally. Aversion to maple diet persisted for 6 days, regardless of toxin. Following a 10-day intermission, aversion to maple diet was reacquired (spontaneous recovery) among subjects previously dosed with LiCl but not for subjects receiving OA. All subjects were then offered two diets: the maple diet previously paired with LiCl or OA and a novel grape-flavoured diet. Immediately following consumption of both diets, all subjects were dosed with LiCl. Preference for maple and grape diets was assessed by two-choice test. Goats avoided maple diet for only 1 day, regardless of their previous experience with maple diet (paired with LiCl or OA). These results indicate that goats generalized the postingestive consequences of the two toxins. Furthermore, presence of a novel flavour (grape) during toxin exposure contributed to rapid extinction of the aversion to maple flavour.