Publikation: Complex foraging behaviours in wild birds emerge from social learning and recombination of components
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Recent well-documented cases of cultural evolution towards increasing efficiency in non-human animals have led some authors to propose that other animals are also capable of cumulative cultural evolution, where traits become more refined and/or complex over time. Yet few comparative examples exist of traits increasing in complexity, and experimental tests remain scarce. In a previous study, we introduced a foraging innovation into replicate subpopulations of great tits, the ‘sliding-door puzzle’. Here we track diffusion of a second ‘dial puzzle’, before introducing a two-step puzzle that combines both actions. We mapped social networks across two generations to ask if individuals could: 1) recombine socially-learned traits, and 2) socially transmit a two-step trait. Our results show birds could recombine skills into more complex foraging behaviours, and naïve birds across both generations could learn the two-step trait. However, closer interrogation revealed that acquisition was not achieved entirely through social learning—rather, birds socially learned components before reconstructing full solutions asocially. As a consequence, singular cultural traditions failed to emerge, although subpopulations of birds shared preferences for a subset of behavioural variants. Our results show that while tits can socially learn complex foraging behaviours, these may need to be scaffolded by rewarding each component.
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WILD, Sonja, Michael CHIMENTO, Keith MCMAHON, Damien R. FARINE, Ben C. SHELDON, Lucy M. APLIN, 2021. Complex foraging behaviours in wild birds emerge from social learning and recombination of components. In: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B : Biological Sciences. Royal Society of London. 2021, 377(1843), 20200307. ISSN 0962-8436. eISSN 1471-2970. Available under: doi: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0307BibTex
@article{Wild2021Compl-54902, year={2021}, doi={10.1098/rstb.2020.0307}, title={Complex foraging behaviours in wild birds emerge from social learning and recombination of components}, number={1843}, volume={377}, issn={0962-8436}, journal={Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B : Biological Sciences}, author={Wild, Sonja and Chimento, Michael and McMahon, Keith and Farine, Damien R. and Sheldon, Ben C. and Aplin, Lucy M.}, note={Discussion meeting issue ‘The emergence of collective knowledge and cumulative culture in animals, humans and machines’ Article Number: 20200307} }
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