Abstract
Urbanization has been shown to affect a variety of traits in animals, including their physiology, morphology, and behaviour, but it is less clear how cognitive traits are modified. Urban habitats contain artificially elevated food sources, such as bird feeders, that are known to affect the foraging behaviours of urban animals. As of yet however, it is not known whether urbanization and the abundance of supplemental food during the winter reduce caching behaviours and spatial memory in scatter hoarders. We aimed to examine individual variation in caching and spatial memory between and within urban and rural habitats to determine i) whether urban individuals cache less frequently and perform less accurately on a spatial task, and ii) explore, for the first time in scatter hoarders, whether slower explorers perform more accurately on a spatial task, indicating a speed-accuracy trade-off within individuals. We assessed spatial memory of wild-caught black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus; N = 96) from 14 sites along an urban gradient. While the individuals that cached more food in captivity were all from rural environments, we find no clear evidence that caching intensity and spatial memory accuracy differ along an urban gradient, and find no significant relationship between spatial cognition and exploration of a novel environment within individuals. However, individuals that performed more accurately also tended to cache more frequently, suggesting for the first time that the specialization of spatial memory in scatter hoarders may also occur at the level of the individual in addition to the population and species levels.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
4 articles.
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