Abstract
Enlarged brains of homeotherms bring behavioural advantages, but incur
high energy expenditures for the animal. The ‘Expensive Tissue’ (ET)
hypothesis links the evolution of the enlarged brain to increased
cognitive abilities (CA) that improved foraging performance, social
interactions and allowed for reduction in size of the energetically
demanding gut. We tested the directionality of the evolutionary
trade-off between brain, gut and CA using experimental evolution model
consisting of lines of laboratory mice subjected to artificial selection
on basal (BMR) or maximum (VO2max) aerobic metabolism - traits that are
implicated in evolution of homeothermy and CA. High BMR mice had bigger
guts, but not brains. Yet, they performed better in cognitively
demanding tasks and had higher neuronal plasticity than their
counterparts. The data indicate that evolutionary increase of CA was
initially associated with brain plasticity and fuelled by an enlarged
gut, which was not traded off for brain size, as the ET posits.