Wild hummingbirds rely on landmarks not geometry when learning an array of flowers.

Abstract:

:Rats, birds or fish trained to find a reward in one corner of a small enclosure tend to learn the location of the reward using both nearby visual features and the geometric relationships of corners and walls. Because these studies are conducted under laboratory and thereby unnatural conditions, we sought to determine whether wild, free-living rufous hummingbirds (Selasphorus rufus) learning a single reward location within a rectangular array of flowers would similarly employ both nearby visual landmarks and the geometric relationships of the array. Once subjects had learned the location of the reward, we used test probes in which one or two experimental landmarks were moved or removed in order to reveal how the birds remembered the reward location. The hummingbirds showed no evidence that they used the geometry of the rectangular array of flowers to remember the reward. Rather, they used our experimental landmarks, and possibly nearby, natural landmarks, to orient and navigate to the reward. We believe this to be the first test of the use of rectangular geometry by wild animals, and we recommend further studies be conducted in ecologically relevant conditions in order to help determine how and when animals form complex geometric representations of their local environments.

journal_name

Anim Cogn

journal_title

Animal cognition

authors

Hurly TA,Fox TA,Zwueste DM,Healy SD

doi

10.1007/s10071-014-0748-x

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2014-09-01 00:00:00

pages

1157-65

issue

5

eissn

1435-9448

issn

1435-9456

journal_volume

17

pub_type

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