Rats can maintain energy intake in response to changes in the caloric
density of food by compensatory shifts in the number and size of meals
. This study challenged rats' regulation of intake in two ways: manipu
lating the caloric density covertly to remove orosensory cues and alte
ring baseline meal patterns by increasing the cost of obtaining meals.
Rats with gastric catheters were maintained on a complete liquid diet
delivered by pumps to a drinking spout and to the stomach; within mea
ls, a rat's licking at the spout controlled the timing and duration of
the simultaneous isovolemic intragastric infusions. Prior to each mea
l, some of the rats were required to press a bar to activate the spout
mechanism; when the meal cost was paid, a cue light signaled that lic
ks would deliver food. The light remained on until the rat ceased lick
ing for 10 consecutive min; to resume feeding, the rat had to pay the
cost again. The standard diet pumped to the spout was prepared at 1 kc
al/g; the intragastrically co-infused diet varied from 0 (water) to 2
kcal/g in 0.5-kcal/g increments. Each concentration was presented for
at least 4 days. Separate groups of rats were studied at no cost, low
cost (5 bar presses/meal),and high cost (80 bar presses/meal). As the
infusate concentration increased, the rats ate fewer meals per day. Me
al size by weight decreased as caloric density increased, with the lar
gest meals taken when water was infused. Caloric meal size increased l
inearly with caloric density for all groups. Meal sizes in the low-cos
t group were similar to those of the no-cost group,but the latter took
more meals per day and, therefore,consumed more total calories. High-
cost meal patterns were parallel to those of the other groups, but wit
h fewer, larger meals. All groups maintained a constant daily caloric
intake across infusate concentrations. Meal patterns changed rapidly i
n response to these ''covert'' (untasted, isovolemic) changes in calor
ic density. Rats can, thus, integrate the cost of obtaining food and i
ts postingestive benefits in the absence of mediating orosensory cues.