Ontogenetic approach reveals how cognitive capability and motivation shape prey‐searching behavior in Pholcus phalangioides cellar spiders |
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Authors: | Joseph T. Kilmer Zachary S. Havens Rafael L. Rodríguez |
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Affiliation: | Behavioral & Molecular Ecology Group, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
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Abstract: | An important part of understanding the evolution of behavior is understanding how and why behavior develops and changes throughout ontogeny. Patterns of behavior are shaped by an animal's capabilities as well as its motivations, both of which are subject to selection. We ran an experiment to see how spiders' efforts to recover lost prey change with age and to determine the relative contributions of shifts in capability and motivation. We found that as spiders mature, they spend less time searching to recover lost prey, and they discriminate less between prey of different sizes. We also found that even the youngest, least experienced spiders are cognitively equipped to search for lost prey. Thus, predatory behavior in spiders fluctuated primarily with each age group's motivations to capture and consume prey, and did not seem to be hindered by behavioral or cognitive limitations at young ages. |
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Keywords: | behavioral limitations behavioral motivations cognition cognitive phenotypes development prey‐searching |
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