Preference for spatial cues in a non-storing songbird species
- 21 December 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Animal Cognition
- Vol. 8 (3) , 211-214
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-004-0249-4
Abstract
Male mammals typically outperform their conspecific females on spatial tasks. A sex difference in cues used to solve the task could underlie this performance difference as spatial ability is reliant on appropriate cue use. Although comparative studies of memory in food-storing and non-storing birds have examined species differences in cue preference, few studies have investigated differences in cue use within a species. In this study, we used a one-trial associative food-finding task to test for sex differences in cue use in the great tit, Parus major. Birds were trained to locate a food reward hidden in a well covered by a coloured cloth. To determine whether the colour of the cloth or the location of the well was learned during training, the birds were presented with three wells in the test phase: one in the original location, but covered by a cloth of a novel colour, a second in a new location covered with the original cloth and a third in a new location covered by a differently coloured cloth. Both sexes preferentially visited the well in the training location rather than either alternative. As great tits prefer colour cues over spatial cues in one-trial associative conditioning tasks, cue preference appears to be related to the task type rather than being species dependent.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sex and seasonal changes in the rate of cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus of adult wild meadow volesNeuroscience, 1999
- Sex differences in spatial learning and prefrontal and parietal cortical dendritic morphology in the meadow vole, Microtus pennsylvanicusBrain Research, 1998
- Sexual differences in memory in shiny cowbirdsAnimal Cognition, 1998
- Pigeons' (Columba livia) encoding of geometric and featural properties of a spatial environment.Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1998
- Melatonin, immunity and cost of reproductive state in male European starlingsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1998
- Hippocampus and memory in a food-storing and in a nonstoring bird species.Behavioral Neuroscience, 1996
- One-trial associative memory: comparison of food-storing and nonstoring species of birdsLearning & Behavior, 1994
- Memory for spatial and local cues: A comparison of a storing and a nonstoring speciesLearning & Behavior, 1994
- Sexually dimorphic spatial learning varies seasonally in two populations of deer miceBrain Research, 1994
- Evolution of spatial cognition: sex-specific patterns of spatial behavior predict hippocampal size.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990