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1.
Proc Biol Sci ; 291(2032): 20240959, 2024 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39379000

RESUMEN

Unpredictably fluctuating environments create complex selective landscapes that shape the distribution of key life history traits. Identifying the mechanisms behind dynamic patterns of selection is difficult, yet essential for predicting responses to climate change. We combine long-term measures with field manipulation of natural selection on breeding date in a wild bird to investigate whether highly variable spring cold snaps drive fluctuating selection. We show that variation in cold snap intensity leads to fluctuating selection on breeding date-in weak cold snap years, selection was consistently negative; however, in strong cold snap years, its direction reversed. These patterns were mirrored in a field experiment; nests that were food supplemented during cold snaps avoided cold snap mortality leading earlier breeders to have higher fitness. In contrast, in the non-supplemented group earlier breeders had higher cold snap nest mortality and selection was positive. Using nearly a century of climate data, we show that cold snaps are becoming less frequent and paradoxically occurring later which should allow earlier breeders to avoid them, potentially releasing conflicting selection pressures and facilitating a rapid phenological shift. Thus, rather than constraining a species' ability to adapt, climate change can enable a rapid shift to a new phenotypic optimum.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Selección Genética , Animales , Estaciones del Año , Frío , Reproducción , Passeriformes/fisiología
2.
Proc Biol Sci ; 291(2033): 20240922, 2024 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39412245

RESUMEN

Language is unbounded in its generativity, enabling the flexible combination of words into novel sentences. Critically, these constructions are intelligible to others due to our ability to derive a sentence's compositional meaning from the semantic relationships among its components. Some animals also concatenate meaningful calls into compositional-like combinations to communicate more complex information. However, these combinations are structurally highly stereotyped, suggesting a bounded system of holistically perceived signals that impedes the processing of novel variants. Using long-term data and playback experiments on pied babblers, we demonstrate that, despite production stereotypy, they can nevertheless process structurally modified and novel combinations of their calls, demonstrating a capacity for deriving meaning compositionally. Furthermore, differential responses to artificial combinations by fledglings suggest that this compositional sensitivity is acquired ontogenetically. Our findings demonstrate animal combinatorial systems can be flexible at the perceptual level and that such perceptual flexibility may represent a precursor of language-like generativity.


Asunto(s)
Lenguaje , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Passeriformes/fisiología , Percepción Auditiva
3.
Anim Cogn ; 27(1): 71, 2024 Oct 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39475969

RESUMEN

Egg rejection often involves a cognitive process of recognizing foreign eggs, which can vary not only between species or among different individuals of the same species, but also within the same individual during different breeding stages, leading to markedly different responses to parasitic eggs. We conducted a comparative study in Wuhan, Hubei, and Fusong, Jilin, China, on the recognition and rejection behavior of azure-winged magpies (Cyanopica cyanus) at different breeding stages (pre-egg-laying, one-host-egg, multi-host-egg and early incubation stages). In the Fusong population, there was a significant difference in the rejection rate of model eggs by azure-winged magpies at different stages of the egg-laying period. During the one-host-egg stage, the rejection rate (63.6%) was significantly lower than that during the pre-egg-laying stage (85.7%) and the multi-host-egg stage (100%). The population of azure-winged magpies in Wuhan exhibited a 100% rejection rate towards model eggs during the pre-egg-laying stage. Furthermore, during the incubation stage, azure-winged magpies were able to accurately recognize and reject foreign eggs even when those were in majority. This indicates that azure-winged magpies employ a template-based recognition mechanism rather than relying on discordance mechanism for recognition after the onset of incubation. This study suggests that while azure-winged magpies can truly recognize their own eggs, different breeding stages still influence their rejection response towards parasitic eggs, especially during the pre-egg-laying and egg laying stages.


Asunto(s)
Óvulo , Reconocimiento en Psicología , Animales , Femenino , Passeriformes/fisiología , China
4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 291(2033): 20241944, 2024 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39471858

RESUMEN

Large-scale climatic fluctuations, such as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, can have dramatic effects on ocean ecosystem productivity. Many mobile species breeding in temperate or higher latitudes escape the extremes of seasonal climate variation through long-distance, even trans-global migration, but how they deal with, or are affected by, such longer phased climate fluctuations is less understood. To investigate how a long-lived migratory species might respond to such periodic environmental change we collected and analysed a 13 year biologging dataset for a trans-equatorial migrant, the Manx shearwater (Puffinus puffinus). Our primary finding was that in El Niño years, non-breeding birds were at more northerly (lower) latitudes than in La Niña years, a response attributable to individual flexibility in migratory destinations. Daily time spent foraging varied in concert with this latitudinal shift, with birds foraging less in El Niño years. Secondarily, we found that in subsequent breeding, a hemisphere away, El Niño years saw a reduction in foraging time and chick provisioning rates: effects that could not be attributed to conditions at their breeding grounds in the North Atlantic. Thus, in a highly migratory animal, individuals may adjust to fluctuating non-breeding conditions but still experience cascading carry over effects on subsequent behaviour.


Asunto(s)
Migración Animal , El Niño Oscilación del Sur , Animales , Estaciones del Año , Cambio Climático , Aves/fisiología , Passeriformes/fisiología
5.
Evolution ; 78(11): 1751-1760, 2024 Oct 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39271183

RESUMEN

In many animal species, including most birds, parental care is performed by both parents, which has important implications for mate choice (good parent hypothesis) and parental investment strategies. Partitioning the variance in measures of parental care into heritable and nonheritable components is important to understand the evolvability of parental investment and its potential role in mate choice. We employed an automated system to monitor provisioning behavior at 817 blue tit nests over 10 years (totaling ~3 million visits). Daily provisioning rates of males and females were moderately repeatable between years (Radj = 0.16 and 0.15, respectively), which was almost entirely explained by additive genetic effects. While this degree of heritability is sufficient for parental investment to respond to selection, we argue that the modest level of repeatability provides limited potential for a "provisioning phenotype" to be used as a criterion in mate choice. Daily visit rates were positively correlated between pair members, but after accounting for shared environmental factors, this relationship became clearly negative, thereby providing support for models of partial compensation. Visit rates also differed substantially between years, and between days within a year. Thus, it is important to account for these variables when comparing the parental investment between individuals. Our results highlight the interplay between genetic, social, and environmental influences on provisioning behavior.


Asunto(s)
Comportamiento de Nidificación , Animales , Masculino , Femenino , Passeriformes/genética , Passeriformes/fisiología , Pájaros Cantores/genética , Pájaros Cantores/fisiología
6.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 22340, 2024 09 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39333644

RESUMEN

Previous studies have shown that the threat level posed by a predator can vary with physical features. In this study, we tested whether the wing posture of a raptor could serve as a clue for bird threat assessment. We observed the behavioral response of Japanese tits Parus minor to taxidermy dummies Eurasian sparrowhawks Accipiter nisus with either spread wings and closed wings. The results showed that the response scores to sparrowhawks with spread wings were higher than those to sparrowhawks with closed wings. We suggested that Japanese tits can assess the predation risk associated with changes in wing posture of predators.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Predatoria , Animales , Halcones/fisiología , Passeriformes/fisiología , Postura/fisiología , Conducta Predatoria/fisiología , Alas de Animales/fisiología
7.
Biol Lett ; 20(9): 20240284, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39319668

RESUMEN

The degree to which within-population variation in sexual trait expression relates to resource heterogeneity remains poorly explored. This is particularly true in lek-mating species, where genetic explanations for male phenotypic variance and mating success are dominant. Here, we demonstrate a link between fine-scale fruit resource availability and indices of male mating success in the white-bearded manakin (Manacus manacus), a lek-mating frugivorous bird that produces energetically costly courtship displays. We used motion-activated camera traps to monitor male display behaviour and female visitation at male courts while concurrently conducting twice-monthly fruit surveys around courts. We observed significant variability in ripe fruit biomass among display courts and leks, and mean fruit biomass at courts significantly predicted male display rates. In turn, male display rate was the strongest predictor of female visitation to courts. Causal modelling supported the hypothesis that hyper-local fruit availability indirectly affects female visitation via its direct effects on male display rate. The demonstration that resource availability at fine spatial scales predicts display rate in a lekking organism-for which resource-related variables are typically not considered to play important roles in shaping male reproductive variance-has implications for the expression, honesty and maintenance of sexually selected traits under fluctuating ecological conditions.


Asunto(s)
Frutas , Animales , Masculino , Femenino , Passeriformes/fisiología , Preferencia en el Apareamiento Animal , Selección Sexual , Conducta Sexual Animal/fisiología
8.
Evolution ; 78(11): 1774-1789, 2024 Oct 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39212586

RESUMEN

Describing how hybrid zones respond to anthropogenic influence can illuminate how the environment regulates both species distributions and reproductive isolation between species. In this study, we analyzed specimens collected from the Passerina cyanea×P. amoena hybrid zone between 2004 and 2007 and between 2019 and 2021 to explore changes in genetic structure over time. This comparison follows a previous study that identified a significant westward shift of the Passerina hybrid zone during the latter half of the twentieth century. A second temporal comparison of hybrid zone genetic structure presents unique potential to describe finer-scale dynamics and to identify potential mechanisms of observed changes more accurately. After concluding that the westward movement of the Passerina hybrid zone has accelerated in recent decades, we investigated potential drivers of this trend by modeling the influence of bioclimatic and landcover variables on genetic structure. We also incorporated eBird data to determine how the distributions of P. cyanea and P. amoena have responded to recent climate and landcover changes. We found that the distribution of P. cyanea in the northern Great Plains has shifted west to track a moving climatic niche, supporting anthropogenic climate change as a key mediator of introgression in this system.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Hibridación Genética , Animales , Passeriformes/genética , Passeriformes/fisiología , Aislamiento Reproductivo , Distribución Animal
9.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 20184, 2024 08 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39215166

RESUMEN

Migration, a bird's metabolic apex, depends primarily on the liver and muscle for fuel mobilization and endurance flight. In migratory redheaded buntings, adaptive increase in mitochondrial membrane (MM) proton gradient to drive ATP synthesis, measured by MM potential (MMP+) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) response, have been well characterized in the blood but not in the muscle or liver. We assessed MMP+, ROS, and apoptosis in the liver and pectoralis muscle of photosensitive nonmigratory (nMig.) male redheaded buntings photoinduced to migratory (Mig.) states. Relative expression levels of genes associated with energy (ACADM, PEPCK, GOT2, GLUT1, and CS), ROS modulation (SIRT1), mitochondrial free-radical scavengers (SOD1, PRX4, NOS2, GPX1, and GPX4), anti-apoptotic genes (NF-κß), apoptotic (CASP7), and tissue damage using histology, during migration were assessed. The MMP+ decreased and the ROS concentration increased, due to the metabolic load on liver and pectoralis muscle tissues during Mig. However, percentage of apoptotic cells increased in liver but decreased in muscle, which is of functional significance to migratory passerines. During Mig., in muscle, SIRT1 increased, while an increase in anti-apoptotic NF-κß aided immune pathway-mediated antioxidant activity and guarded against muscle oxidative damage during migration. Inter-organ differences in metabolism add to our current understanding of metabolic flexibility that supports successful migration in buntings.


Asunto(s)
Migración Animal , Apoptosis , Hígado , Oxidación-Reducción , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno , Animales , Migración Animal/fisiología , Masculino , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno/metabolismo , Hígado/metabolismo , Passeriformes/metabolismo , Passeriformes/fisiología , Passeriformes/genética , Músculo Esquelético/metabolismo , Potencial de la Membrana Mitocondrial , Estrés Oxidativo
10.
Curr Biol ; 34(16): R772-R774, 2024 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39163836

RESUMEN

New research suggests that free-living blue and great tits remember foraging, including food type, location, and time since eating, even when event details were not known to be relevant for a subsequent assessment of memory, implicating the use of episodic memory in natural behavior.


Asunto(s)
Cognición , Animales , Cognición/fisiología , Memoria Episódica , Memoria/fisiología , Passeriformes/fisiología , Conducta Alimentaria
11.
Biol Lett ; 20(8): 20240053, 2024 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39191286

RESUMEN

Nest characteristics are highly variable in the Passeriformes, but the macroevolutionary patterns observable for birds in general are not necessarily valid for specific families, suggesting that both global and within-family studies are needed. Here, we used phylogenetic comparative methods to address the evolutionary patterns of nest type, nest site and habitat in the Troglodytidae, a passerine group with diversified nest and habitat characteristics. The common ancestor of the Troglodytidae likely constructed enclosed nests within sheltered sites (cavity or crevice), but the radiation of the group was characterized by (i) shifts to exposed nest sites (vegetation) with retention of enclosed nests or (ii) retention of sheltered sites with nest simplification (cup nests). Nest site and nest type presented strong phylogenetic conservatism and evolved interdependently, while habitat was poorly correlated with nest evolution. A phylogenetic mixed modelling approach showed that sheltered nest sites were associated with small body size, likely to avoid competition with other animals for these places. With these results, we improve the understanding of nest character evolution in the Troglodytidae and reveal evolutionary aspects not observed so far for passerine birds.


Asunto(s)
Tamaño Corporal , Ecosistema , Comportamiento de Nidificación , Passeriformes , Filogenia , Animales , Passeriformes/fisiología , Passeriformes/clasificación , Passeriformes/genética , Evolución Biológica
12.
BMC Ecol Evol ; 24(1): 109, 2024 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39160456

RESUMEN

The songs of birds are complex signals that may have several functions and vary widely among species. Different ecological, behavioural and morphological factors, as well as phylogeny, have been associated as predictors of the evolution of song structure. However, the importance of differences in development, despite their relevance, has seldom been considered. Here, we analysed the evolution of song in two families of songbirds that differ in song development, manakins (suboscines) and cardinals (oscines), with their phylogeny, morphology, and ecology. Our results show that song characteristics had higher phylogenetic signal in cardinals than in manakins, suggesting higher evolutionary lability in the suboscines. Body mass was the main predictor of song parameters in manakins, and together with habitat type, had a major effect on cardinals' song structure. Precipitation and altitude were also associated with some song characteristics in cardinals. Our results bring unexpected insights into birdsong evolution, in which non-learners (manakins) revealed greater evolutionary lability than song learners (cardinals).


Asunto(s)
Filogenia , Pájaros Cantores , Vocalización Animal , Animales , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Pájaros Cantores/fisiología , Pájaros Cantores/genética , Peso Corporal , Evolución Biológica , Masculino , Passeriformes/fisiología , Passeriformes/genética , Ecosistema
13.
Am Nat ; 204(2): 181-190, 2024 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39008842

RESUMEN

AbstractWhere dramatic sexual displays are involved in attracting a mate, individuals can enhance their performances by manipulating their physical environment. Typically, individuals alter their environment either in preparation for a performance by creating a "stage" or during the display itself by using discrete objects as "props." We examined an unusual case of performative manipulation of an entire stage by male Albert's lyrebirds (Menura alberti) during their complex song and dance displays. We found that males from throughout the species' range shake the entangled forest vegetation of their display platforms, creating a highly conspicuous and stereotypical movement external to their bodies. This "stage shaking" is performed in two different rhythms, with the second rhythm an isochronous beat that matches the beat of the coinciding vocalizations. Our results provide evidence that stage shaking is an integral, and thus likely functional, component of male Albert's lyrebird sexual displays and so highlight an intriguing but poorly understood facet of complex communication.


Asunto(s)
Vocalización Animal , Masculino , Animales , Conducta Sexual Animal , Ambiente , Passeriformes/fisiología , Comunicación Animal
14.
Anim Cogn ; 27(1): 47, 2024 Jul 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38980424

RESUMEN

Performance in tests of various cognitive abilities has often been compared, both within and between species. In intraspecific comparisons, habitat effects on cognition has been a popular topic, frequently with an underlying assumption that urban animals should perform better than their rural conspecifics. In this study, we tested problem-solving ability in great tits Parus major, in a string-pulling and a plug-opening test. Our aim was to compare performance between urban and rural great tits, and to compare their performance with previously published problem solving studies. Our great tits perfomed better in string-pulling than their conspecifics in previous studies (solving success: 54%), and better than their close relative, the mountain chickadee Poecile gambeli, in the plug-opening test (solving success: 70%). Solving latency became shorter over four repeated sessions, indicating learning abilities, and showed among-individual correlation between the two tests. However, the solving ability did not differ between habitat types in either test. Somewhat unexpectedly, we found marked differences between study years even though we tried to keep conditions identical. These were probably due to small changes to the experimental protocol between years, for example the unavoidable changes of observers and changes in the size and material of test devices. This has an important implication: if small changes in an otherwise identical set-up can have strong effects, meaningful comparisons of cognitive performance between different labs must be extremely hard. In a wider perspective this highlights the replicability problem often present in animal behaviour studies.


Asunto(s)
Solución de Problemas , Animales , Masculino , Femenino , Ecosistema , Passeriformes/fisiología
15.
Biol Lett ; 20(7): 20240303, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39079677

RESUMEN

Dynamic flash coloration is a type of antipredator coloration where intermittently appearing colour patterns in moving animals misdirect predator attacks by obscuring the precise location and trajectory of the moving prey. Birds and butterflies with differing dorsoventral wing coloration or iridescent surface structures may potentially benefit from such effects. However, we lack an understanding of what makes for an effective dynamic flash colour design and how much it benefits the carrier. Here, we test the effect of colour flashing using small passerine birds preying upon colourful, moving, virtual 'prey' stimuli on a touchscreen. We show that at fast speeds, green-to-blue flashing colour patterns can reduce the likelihood of pecks hitting the target, induce greater error in targeting accuracy and increase the number of pecks at a stimulus relative to similarly coloured non-flashing targets. Our results support the idea that dynamic flash coloration can deflect predatory attacks at fast speeds, but the effect may be the opposite when moving slowly.


Asunto(s)
Color , Conducta Predatoria , Animales , Reacción de Fuga/fisiología , Pigmentación , Passeriformes/fisiología , Mariposas Diurnas/fisiología
16.
Biol Open ; 13(8)2024 Aug 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39069816

RESUMEN

Exposure of wildlife to anthropogenic noise is associated with disruptive effects. Research on this topic has focused on behavioural and physiological responses of animals to noise, with little work investigating links to cognitive function. Neurological processes that maintain cognitive performance can be impacted by stress and sleep disturbances. While sleep loss impairs cognitive performance in Australian magpies, it is unclear whether urban noise, which disrupts sleep, can impact cognition as well. To fill this gap, we explored how environmentally relevant urban noise affected the performance of wild-caught, city-living Australian magpies (Gymnorhina tibicen tyrannica) on a cognitive task battery including associative and reversal learning, inhibitory control, and spatial memory. Birds were housed and tested in a laboratory environment; sample sizes varied across tasks (n=7-9 birds). Tests were conducted over 4 weeks, during which all magpies were exposed to both an urban noise playback and a quiet control. Birds were presented with the entire test battery twice: following exposure to, and in the absence of, an anthropogenic noise playback; however, tests were always performed without noise (playback muted during testing). Magpies performed similarly in both treatments on all four tasks. We also found that prior experience with the associative learning task had a strong effect on performance, with birds performing better on their second round of trials. Like previous findings on Australian magpies tested on the same tasks in the wild under noisy conditions, we could not find any disruptive effects on cognitive performance in a controlled experimental laboratory setting.


Asunto(s)
Cognición , Ruido , Passeriformes , Animales , Ruido/efectos adversos , Australia , Passeriformes/fisiología , Conducta Animal , Masculino
17.
Mol Ecol ; 33(17): e17481, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39044486

RESUMEN

Urbanisation has been increasing worldwide in recent decades, driving environmental change and exerting novel selective pressures on wildlife. Phenotypic differences between urban and rural individuals have been widely documented in several taxa. However, the extent to which urbanisation impacts mating strategies is less known. Here, we investigated extra-pair paternity variation in great tits (Parus major) and blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) breeding in nestboxes set in a gradient of urbanisation in Warsaw, Poland, over three breeding seasons. Urbanisation was quantified as the amount of light pollution, noise pollution, impervious surface area (ISA) and tree cover within a 100-m radius around each nestbox. We obtained genotypes for 1213 great tits at 7344 SNP markers and for 1299 blue tits at 9366 SNP markers with a genotyping-by-sequencing method, and inferred extra-pair paternity by computing a genomewide relatedness matrix. We report higher extra-pair paternity in blue tits breeding in more urbanised areas, for example, with higher light pollution and ISA, and lower tree cover. However, no such trend was found in great tits. Late-stage survival of individual nestlings in both species was not associated with paternity or urbanisation proxies, thus we were not able to detect fitness benefits or drawbacks of being an extra-pair offspring in relation to urbanisation. Our results contribute to the growing body of knowledge reporting on the effects of urbanisation on avian ecology and behaviour, and confirm species-specific and population-specific patterns of extra-pair paternity variation.


Asunto(s)
Genotipo , Passeriformes , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Animales , Passeriformes/genética , Passeriformes/fisiología , Polonia , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple/genética , Urbanización , Cruzamiento , Conducta Sexual Animal , Reproducción/genética , Masculino , Paternidad , Femenino
18.
Curr Biol ; 34(16): 3593-3602.e5, 2024 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38964317

RESUMEN

Episodic-like memory in non-human animals represents the behavioral characteristics of human episodic memory-the ability to mentally travel backward in time to "re-live" past experiences. A focus on traditional model species of episodic-like memory may overlook taxa possessing this cognitive ability and consequently its evolution across species. Experiments conducted in the wild have the potential to broaden the scope of episodic-like memory research under the natural conditions in which they evolved. We combine two distinct yet complementary episodic-like memory tasks (the what-where-when memory and incidental encoding paradigms), each targeting a different aspect of human episodic memory, namely the content (what-where-when) and process (incidental encoding), to comprehensively test the memory abilities of wild, free-living, non-caching blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) and great tits (Parus major). Automated feeders with custom-built programs allowed for experimental manipulation of spatiotemporal experiences on an individual-level basis. In the what-where-when memory experiment, after learning individualized temporal feeder rules, the birds demonstrated their ability to recall the "what" (food type), "where" (feeder location), and "when" (time since their initial visit of the day) of previous foraging experiences. In the incidental encoding experiment, the birds showed that they were able to encode and recall incidental spatial information regarding previous foraging experiences ("where" test), and juveniles, but not adults, were also able to recall incidentally encoded visual information ("which" test). Consequently, this study presents multiple lines of converging evidence for episodic-like memory in a wild population of generalist foragers, suggesting that episodic-like memory may be more taxonomically widespread than previously assumed.


Asunto(s)
Memoria Episódica , Passeriformes , Animales , Passeriformes/fisiología , Masculino , Femenino , Recuerdo Mental/fisiología
19.
Anim Cogn ; 27(1): 52, 2024 Jul 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39060612

RESUMEN

Despite considerable research into the structure of cognition in non-human animal species, there is still much debate as to whether animal cognition is organised as a series of discrete domains or an overarching general cognitive factor. In humans, the existence of general intelligence is widely accepted, but less work has been undertaken in animal psychometrics to address this question. The relatively few studies on non-primate animal species that do investigate the structure of cognition rarely include tasks assessing social cognition and focus instead on physical cognitive tasks. In this study, we tested 36 wild Western Australian magpies (Gymnorhina tibicen dorsalis) on a battery of three physical (associative learning, spatial memory, and numerical assessment) and one social (observational spatial memory) cognitive task, to investigate if cognition in this species fits a general cognitive factor model, or instead one of separate physical and social cognitive domains. A principal component analysis (PCA) identified two principal components with eigenvalues exceeding 1; a first component onto which all three physical tasks loaded strongly and positively, and a second component onto which only the social task (observational spatial memory) loaded strongly and positively. These findings provide tentative evidence for separate physical and social cognitive domains in this species, and highlight the importance of including tasks assessing both social and physical cognition in cognitive test batteries.


Asunto(s)
Cognición , Passeriformes , Animales , Masculino , Femenino , Passeriformes/fisiología , Memoria Espacial , Cognición Social
20.
Proc Biol Sci ; 291(2024): 20240435, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38835280

RESUMEN

Extensive research has investigated the relationship between the social environment and cognition, suggesting that social complexity may drive cognitive evolution and development. However, evidence for this relationship remains equivocal. Group size is often used as a measure of social complexity, but this may not capture intraspecific variation in social interactions. Social network analysis can provide insight into the cognitively demanding challenges associated with group living at the individual level. Here, we use social networks to investigate whether the cognitive performance of wild Western Australian magpies (Gymnorhina tibicen dorsalis) is related to group size and individual social connectedness. We quantified social connectedness using four interaction types: proximity, affiliative, agonistic and vocal. Consistent with previous research on this species, individuals in larger groups performed better on an associative learning task. However, social network position was also related to cognitive performance. Individuals receiving aggressive interactions performed better, while those involved in aggressive interactions with more group members performed worse. Overall, this suggests that cognitive performance is related to specific types of social interaction. The findings from this study highlight the value of considering fine-grained metrics of sociality that capture the challenges associated with social life when testing the relationship between the social environment and cognition.


Asunto(s)
Agresión , Cognición , Conducta Social , Animales , Australia Occidental , Masculino , Passeriformes/fisiología , Femenino
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