A generalist microbial predator shows innate attraction to more profitable prey, but does not learn from experience

Abstract How do generalists adjust to variation in prey abundance and profitability and seek out their preferred prey? We investigated this question in the soil protist Dictyostelium discoideum, a generalist predator of many species of bacteria. Despite their generalist diet, amoebas proliferate more quickly on some bacteria than on others. We tested amoeba chemoattraction towards 23 bacterial species and found that they are generally more attracted to the more profitable prey bacteria. Naive am