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Spatial memory in a food storing corvid I. Near tall landmarks are primarily used

journal contribution
posted on 1993-08-01, 00:00 authored by Andy Bennett
This work suggests how food storing corvids use spatial memory to relocate caches, and how they can do this after some landmarks surrounding caches have become hidden due to leaf fall, snow fall or plant growth. Experiments involved training European jays (Garrulus glandarius) to find buried food, the location of which was specified by an array of 12 landmarks. Tests were then performed with the array rotated, or with certain landmarks removed from the array. The.main findings were: (1) birds primarily remembered the position of the goal using the near tall landmarks (15-30 cm from the goal and 20 cm high); (2) birds obtained a sense of direction both from the landmark array and something external to the array; (3) birds did not use smell or marks in the surface of the ground to find the goal. Memory of near tall landmarks is likely to be functional for these birds since (a) nearer landmarks provide a more accurate fix, and (b) taller landmarks are less likely to be completely obscured by snow fall, leaf fall or intervening vegetation. The work also demonstrates the use of G.I.S. software for the analysis and representation of animal search patterns.

History

Journal

Journal of comparative physiology a-sensory neural and behavioral physiology

Volume

173

Issue

2

Pagination

193 - 207

Publisher

Springer Berlin / Heidelberg

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

0340-7594

eISSN

1432-1351

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

1993, Springer