Getting a head start: the slime mold, Physarum polycephalum, tune foraging decision to motivational asymmetry when faced with competition

Abstract

Slime mould plasmodia can adjust their behaviour in response to chemical trails left by themselves and other Physarum plasmodia. This simple feedback process increases their foraging efficiency. We still do not know whether other factors influence plasmodium behaviour in realistic competition settings. Here we designed a competition experiment where two plasmodia had to find one food source in a common environment. As previously shown, the time it took plasmodia to find food depended on their hunger motivation. However, the time it took a plasmodium to start looking for food depended on its motivation and the motivation of its competitor. Plasmodia always initiated foraging quicker if they were in the presence of a competitor and the quickest if they were hungry and in the presence of a satiated competitor. The time it took to arrive to the food was not influenced by whether they were alone or with a competitor. Ultimately, this complex competition response benefited the hungry plasmodia as they had a 4:1 chance of finding the food first. The sensory ecology of Physarum polycephalum is more complex than previously thought and yields complex behaviour in a simple organism.

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