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-List Of Titles -Movement and memory : different cognitive strategies are used to search for resources with different natural distributions

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/130811

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Title
Movement and memory : different cognitive strategies are used to search for resources with different natural distributions
Related
Behavioral ecology and sociobiology, Vol. 65, Issue 4, (2011), p.621-631
DOI
10.1007/s00265-010-1063-4
Publisher
Springer
Date
2011
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
050200 Environmental Science and Management  060200 Ecology
Author/Creator
Sulikowski, Danielle
Author/Creator
Burke, Darren
Description
Recent attempts to integrate function and mechanism have resulted in an appreciation of the relevance of forager psychology to understanding the functional aspects of foraging behaviour. Conversely, an acknowledgement of the functional diversity of learning mechanisms has led to greater understanding of the adaptive nature of cognition. In this paper, we present data from three experiments suggesting that noisy miner birds use different cognitive strategies when searching for foods with different distributions. When searching for nectar, an immobile, readily depleted resource, birds spontaneously attend to fine-scale spatial information and use a spatial memory-based strategy that is efficient in a novel context and largely resistant to disruptions to movement. When searching for invertebrates, a mobile, clumped and cryptic resource, birds employ a strategy whose efficiency increases with increased task familiarity, is vulnerable to disruptions to their movement and may rely more on memory for movement rules than memory for location information. Previous reports of adapted cognition have reported performance differences between species (for example, better spatial cognitive performance in storing versus non-storing birds). Ours is the first study to demonstrate that differences in cognitive strategy (as opposed to just enhanced performance) occur within a single species in different foraging contexts. As well as providing an example of how specially adapted cognitive mechanisms might work, our data further emphasise the importance of jointly considering functional and mechanistic aspects to fully understand the adaptive complexities of behaviour.
Description
11 page(s)
Subject Keyword
050200 Environmental Science and Management
Subject Keyword
060200 Ecology
Subject Keyword
function
Subject Keyword
mechanism
Subject Keyword
foraging
Subject Keyword
resource distribution
Subject Keyword
search strategy
Subject Keyword
spatial cognition
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Biological Sciences
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Brain, Behaviour and Evolution

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/130811
Identifier
ISSN:0340-5443
Identifier
mq-rm-2010005230
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Subject
"Behavioral ecology and sociobiology"
 
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