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Clark's Nutcrackers Nucifraga columbiana Remember the Size of Their Cached Seeds
Authors:Andrea Möller  Bruce Pavlick  Arla G Hile  & Russell P Balda
Institution:Zoologisches Institut, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt/Main;Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff
Abstract:Clark's nutcrackers ( Nucifraga columbiana ) hide thousands of seeds in subterranean caches that they later recover using spatial information about cache location. In two experiments, we tested whether nutcrackers also remember another type of information regarding their caches – the size of the seeds in each cache. We videotaped birds during cache recovery and then measured their bill gape during probing behaviour as captured on the videotape. In experiment one, six birds each experienced two treatments: one that allowed them to cache and then recover large seeds, and the other, an identical treatment using small seeds. During this experiment, all six birds used a wider gape when attempting to recover seeds during the large-seed treatment than during the small-seed treatment, and gape width was significantly correlated with seed size. During experiment two, we presented birds with both large and small seeds within the same caching session. We also increased the retention interval between caching and recovery. These modifications increased the difficulty of the task. Six of the seven birds used a wider gape during seed recovery when digging for caches that contained large seeds than they did when searching for small seeds. The ability to remember the size of seeds placed within caches may serve to increase the likelihood of speedy and successful recovery. It also allows the birds another level of organization of their food supply. These are the first experiments to suggest that Clark's nutcrackers remember more about their caches than location alone.
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