Cognition mediates response to anthropogenic noise in wild Western Australian magpies (Gmynorhina tibicen dorsalis)

Author:

Blackburn Grace1ORCID,Ashton Benjamin J.12ORCID,Thornton Alex3ORCID,Woodiss‐Field Sarah1,Ridley Amanda R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

2. School of Natural Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Centre for Ecology and Conservation University of Exeter Penryn UK

Abstract

AbstractAnthropogenic noise is a pollutant of growing concern, with wide‐ranging effects on taxa across ecosystems. Until recently, studies investigating the effects of anthropogenic noise on animals focused primarily on population‐level consequences, rather than individual‐level impacts. Individual variation in response to anthropogenic noise may result from extrinsic or intrinsic factors. One such intrinsic factor, cognitive performance, varies between individuals and is hypothesised to aid behavioural response to novel stressors. Here, we combine cognitive testing, behavioural focals and playback experiments to investigate how anthropogenic noise affects the behaviour and anti‐predator response of Western Australian magpies (Gymnorhina tibicen dorsalis), and to determine whether this response is linked to cognitive performance. We found a significant population‐level effect of anthropogenic noise on the foraging effort, foraging efficiency, vigilance, vocalisation rate and anti‐predator response of magpies, with birds decreasing their foraging, vocalisation behaviours and anti‐predator response, and increasing vigilance when loud anthropogenic noise was present. We also found that individuals varied in their response to playbacks depending on their cognitive performance, with individuals that performed better in an associative learning task maintaining their anti‐predator response when an alarm call was played in anthropogenic noise. Our results add to the growing body of literature documenting the adverse effects of anthropogenic noise on wildlife and provide the first evidence for an association between individual cognitive performance and behavioural responses to anthropogenic noise.

Funder

Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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