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The ecology of the avian brain: food-storing memory and the hippocampus
Authors:JOHN R. KREBS  NICKY S. CLAYTON  SUSAN D. HEALY  DANIEL A. CRISTOL  SANJAY N. PATEL  ANNA R. JOLLIFFE
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, Oxford University, South Parks Road, Oxford 0X1 3PS, UK;Department of Psychology, The University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK
Abstract:Some species of birds store food, often hoarding several hundreds of seeds over a period of just a few weeks. Field and laboratory studies have demonstrated that food-storing species have an impressive memory and an enlarged region of the brain, the hippocampal region. Lesion experiments have shown that the hippocampus is important in accurate retrieval of stored food. Taken together, these results have led to the hypothesis that the enlarged hippocampus is associated with the memory requirements of retrieving stored food. In this review, we discuss four areas of study: comparative studies of the brain, comparative studies of behaviour, developmental plasticity and seasonal changes in food storing and the hippocampus.
Keywords:
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