Correlated changes in feeding behavior on selection for large and small body size in mice

Abstract
An automated method was used to record the temporal pattern of feeding of lines of mice selected over 15 generations for high and low body weight (L-mice and S-mice, respectively). Both L-mice and S-mice eat in meals concentrated during the night, and meal frequency is similar in the two lines, but L-mice consume much larger meals, each made up of many more separate feeding bouts. The outbred strain from which the selected lines were derived has a similar basic pattern of feeding in meals, which becomes like that of L-mice when the animal's thermogenic metabolic rate is high, and like that of S-mice when it is low, suggesting that the differences between the feeding patterns of the two selected lines are a secondary consequence of alterations in whole body metabolic rate.