Article

Wild rufous hummingbirds use local landmarks to return to rewarded locations

Details

Citation

Pritchard DJ, Scott RD, Healy SD & Hurly TA (2016) Wild rufous hummingbirds use local landmarks to return to rewarded locations. Behavioural Processes, 122, pp. 59-66. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2015.11.004

Abstract
Animals may remember an important location with reference to one or more visual landmarks. In the laboratory, birds and mammals often preferentially use landmarks near a goal (“local landmarks”) to return to that location at a later date. Although we know very little about how animals in the wild use landmarks to remember locations, mammals in the wild appear to prefer to use distant landmarks to return to rewarded locations. To examine what cues wild birds use when returning to a goal, we trained free-living hummingbirds to search for a reward at a location that was specified by three nearby visual landmarks. Following training we expanded the landmark array to test the extent that the birds relied on the local landmarks to return to the reward. During the test the hummingbirds’ search was best explained by the birds having used the experimental landmarks to remember the reward location. How the birds used the landmarks was not clear and seemed to change over the course of each test. These wild hummingbirds, then, can learn locations in reference to nearby visual landmarks.

Keywords
Spatial cognition; Navigation; Landmarks; Spatial learning; Hummingbirds

Journal
Behavioural Processes: Volume 122

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of St Andrews
Publication date31/01/2016
Publication date online10/11/2015
Date accepted by journal03/11/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/31384
ISSN0376-6357

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