Early social environment affects attention to social cues in juvenile common ravens, Corvus corax

Author:

Gallego-Abenza Mario123ORCID,Boucherie Palmyre H.1ORCID,Bugnyar Thomas12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

2. Konrad Lorenz Forschungsstelle, Core Facility for Behaviour and Cognition, University of Vienna, Grünau im Almtal, Austria

3. Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Social competence, i.e. defined as the ability to adjust the expression of social behaviour to the available social information, is known to be influenced by early-life conditions. Brood size might be one of the factors determining such early conditions, particularly in species with extended parental care. We here tested in ravens whether growing up in families of different sizes affects the chicks' responsiveness to social information. We experimentally manipulated the brood size of 13 captive raven families, creating either small or large families. Simulating dispersal, juveniles were separated from their parents and temporarily housed in one of two captive non-breeder groups. After five weeks of socialization, each raven was individually tested in a playback setting with food-associated calls from three social categories: sibling, familiar unrelated raven they were housed with, and unfamiliar unrelated raven from the other non-breeder aviary. We found that individuals reared in small families were more attentive than birds from large families, in particular towards the familiar unrelated peer. These results indicate that variation in family size during upbringing can affect how juvenile ravens value social information. Whether the observed attention patterns translate into behavioural preferences under daily life conditions remains to be tested in future studies.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Vienna Doctoral School

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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