Article

Wild hummingbirds require a consistent view of landmarks to pinpoint a goal location

Details

Citation

Pritchard DJ, Hurly TA & Healy SD (2018) Wild hummingbirds require a consistent view of landmarks to pinpoint a goal location. Animal Behaviour, 137, pp. 83-94. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2018.01.014

Abstract
One outcome of the extensive work on the ways that birds and insects use visual landmarks to return to a rewarded location is that they use landmarks differently. But this conclusion may have been reached because the almost exclusive training and testing of birds in small laboratory environments may prevent birds from using the view-matching strategies seen in insects. To test how birds use landmarks in an open-field environment, we trained free-living hummingbirds to search for a reward near two experimental landmarks. When the angular size and panoramic position of the landmarks were kept consistent, the hummingbirds searched in the direction of the flower and matched either the retinal angle of the landmarks or the absolute distance of the flower during training, even when the actual size and distance between landmarks changed. These data are more similar to data from view-matching ants solving a similar problem than they are to data from birds trained to use landmarks in the laboratory. This suggests that hummingbirds may also use a remembered view to relocate a rewarded site. Regardless of whether hummingbirds use a remembered view for navigation or just to recognize landmarks, data on landmark use collected from birds tested in the laboratory may not fully reflect how birds return to locations in the wild.

Keywords
hummingbird; landmark; navigation; spatial cognition; spatial learning

Journal
Animal Behaviour: Volume 137

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of St Andrews
Publication date31/03/2018
Publication date online19/02/2018
Date accepted by journal23/11/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/31404
ISSN0003-3472

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