Wild jackdaws learn to tolerate juveniles to exploit new foraging opportunities.

IF 3 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY
Biology Letters Pub Date : 2025-08-01 Epub Date: 2025-08-20 DOI:10.1098/rsbl.2025.0179
Josh J Arbon, Noa Truskanov, Emily Stott, Guillam E McIvor, Alex Thornton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Social tolerance can enhance access to resources and is thought to be crucial in facilitating the evolution of cooperation, social cognition and culture, but it is unknown whether animals can optimize their social tolerance through learning. We presented wild jackdaws (Corvus monedula) with a novel social information problem using automated feeders. Juveniles could always feed (simulating a situation where juveniles were sources of information about a new resource) but adults could only access food if they inhibited their tendency to displace juveniles and instead showed tolerance by occupying an adjacent feeder perch. Accordingly, adults learned to tolerate juveniles, with some evidence they generalized across juveniles as a cohort. The ability to learn to tolerate sources of valuable information, and generalize across cohorts of informed individuals, may facilitate adaptive responses in the face of environmental change and help to explain the success of jackdaws in human-dominated environments.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

野生寒鸦学会容忍幼鸟以利用新的觅食机会。
社会宽容可以增强对资源的获取,并被认为对促进合作、社会认知和文化的进化至关重要,但动物能否通过学习优化其社会宽容尚不清楚。我们用自动喂食器给野生寒鸦(Corvus monedula)提出了一个新的社会信息问题。幼鱼总是可以进食(模拟幼鱼是新资源信息来源的情况),但成年鱼只有在抑制它们取代幼鱼的倾向,并通过占据邻近的喂食点来表现出忍耐力的情况下,才能获得食物。因此,成年人学会了容忍青少年,有证据表明,他们把青少年作为一个群体来推广。学习容忍有价值信息来源的能力,以及在知情个体群体中进行推广的能力,可能促进面对环境变化的适应性反应,并有助于解释寒鸦在人类主导的环境中取得成功的原因。
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来源期刊
Biology Letters
Biology Letters 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
3.00%
发文量
164
审稿时长
1.0 months
期刊介绍: Previously a supplement to Proceedings B, and launched as an independent journal in 2005, Biology Letters is a primarily online, peer-reviewed journal that publishes short, high-quality articles, reviews and opinion pieces from across the biological sciences. The scope of Biology Letters is vast - publishing high-quality research in any area of the biological sciences. However, we have particular strengths in the biology, evolution and ecology of whole organisms. We also publish in other areas of biology, such as molecular ecology and evolution, environmental science, and phylogenetics.
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