SUMMARY: Laboratory‐hatched juvenile yellowtails (mean fork length, 9.3 cm) were reared for 2 months in two groups on different kinds of food, mysid and squid in one group and fish in the other, and the gustatory neural responses to seven chemicals (adenosine‐5'‐monophosphate, alanine, arginine, betaine, proline, tryptophan, and valine) were recorded in fish before and after the 2‐month rearing period. Large variances in the responses to some chemicals were noticed in the juveniles before the rearing experiment. Mann–Whitney U‐tests on the neural responses indicated significant changes in the magnitude of the responses to valine and some other chemicals relative to that for proline or tryptophan between the pre‐ and the two post‐rearing groups. No significant differences in the response magnitude for the seven chemicals were observed for the two post‐rearing groups suggesting that the response changes during the 2‐month rearing might have been intrinsic and not due to specific food items in the diet. The dose–response relationship for some chemicals was also examined in the juveniles before and after the 2‐month rearing. A slight lowering of threshold was noticed for alanine and valine after the rearing. Data on the responses of wild yellowtails were in support of the changing responsiveness of gustatory receptors during development of juvenile yellowtails.
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