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Feeding behavior

2018
Insects need to ingest nutrients at appropriate levels to attain a balanced diet and maximize fitness. They do so by integrated responses that involve physiological mechanisms for sensing current nutritional needs, releasing systemic signals, and producing specific appetites for key required nutrients. Historically, the study of insect feeding behavior
Stephen J. Simpson   +2 more
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Feeding Behavior

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1986
Problems related to feeding behavior in horses fall into three main categories: underconsumption, overconsumption, and abnormal consumption. Anorexia may be caused by a variety of diseases and overcome by removing the underlying causes (pain, fever), and physical or chemical stimulation of appetite. "Hypophagia" may be caused by poor dentition, disease,
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Brain histamine and feeding behavior

Behavioural Brain Research, 2001
Food intake is regulated by many endogenous substances, such as peptides and neurotransmitters in the central nervous system. Based on the clinical observation that some antidepressants and antipsychotics with antihistaminic activity stimulate food intake and increase body weight, histamine has been thought to be an anorectic agent.
T, Morimoto, Y, Yamamoto, A, Yamatodani
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Neural Regulation of Feeding Behavior

2020
Food intake and energy homeostasis determine survival of the organism and species. Information on total energy levels and metabolic state are sensed in the periphery and transmitted to the brain, where it is integrated and triggers the animal to forage, prey, and consume food.
Sijia, Hao   +3 more
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Brainstem mechanisms underlying feeding behaviors

Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 1998
The essential elements controlling trigeminal motoneurons during feeding lie between the trigeminal and facial motor nuclei. These include populations of neurons in the medial reticular formation and pre-motoneurons in the lateral brainstem that reorganize to generate various patterns.
J P, Lund   +3 more
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