Caching for where and what: evidence for a mnemonic strategy in a scatter-hoarder

Author:

Delgado Mikel M.ORCID,Jacobs Lucia F.

Abstract

Scatter-hoarding animals face the task of maximizing retrieval of their scattered food caches while minimizing loss to pilferers. This demand should select for mnemonics, such as chunking, i.e. a hierarchical cognitive representation that is known to improve recall. Spatial chunking, where caches with the same type of content are related to each other in physical location and memory, would be one such mechanism. Here we tested the hypothesis that scatter-hoarding eastern fox squirrels ( Sciurus niger ) are organizing their caches in spatial patterns consistent with a chunking strategy. We presented 45 individual wild fox squirrels with a series of 16 nuts of four different species, either in runs of four of the same species or 16 nuts offered in a pseudorandom order. Squirrels either collected each nut from a different location or collected all nuts from a single location; we then mapped their subsequent cache distributions using GPS. The chunking hypothesis predicted that squirrels would spatially organize caches by nut species, regardless of presentation order. Our results instead demonstrated that squirrels spatially chunked their caches by nut species but only when caching food that was foraged from a single location. This first demonstration of spatial chunking in a scatter hoarder underscores the cognitive demand of scatter hoarding.

Funder

University of California at Berkeley

National Science Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Cited by 9 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Evolutionary lability of food caching behaviour in mammals;Journal of Animal Ecology;2024-06-03

2. The socioeconomics of food hoarding in wild squirrels;Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences;2022-06

3. Brain-behavior relationships of cognition in vertebrates: Lessons from amphibians;Advances in the Study of Behavior;2022

4. Chunking;Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior;2022

5. Disentangling the importance of social and ecological information in goal-directed movements in a wild primate;Animal Behaviour;2021-03

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