Abstract

Corvids (birds in the crow family) are hypothesised to have a general cognitive tool-kit because they show a wide range of transferrable skills across social, physical and temporal tasks, despite differences in socioecology. However, it is unknown whether relatively asocial corvids differ from social corvids in their use of social information in the context of copying the choices of others, because only one such test has been conducted in a relatively asocial corvid. We investigated whether relatively asocial Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius) use social information (i.e., information made available by others). Previous studies have indicated that jays attend to social context in their caching and mate provisioning behaviour; however, it is unknown whether jays copy the choices of others. We tested the jays in two different tasks varying in difficulty, where social corvid species have demonstrated social information use in both tasks. Firstly, an object-dropping task was conducted requiring objects to be dropped down a tube to release a food reward from a collapsible platform, which corvids can learn through explicit training. Only one rook and one New Caledonian crow have learned the task using social information from a demonstrator. Secondly, we tested the birds on a simple colour discrimination task, which should be easy to solve, because it has been shown that corvids can make colour discriminations. Using the same colour discrimination task in a previous study, all common ravens and carrion crows copied the demonstrator. After observing a conspecific demonstrator, none of the jays solved the object-dropping task, though all jays were subsequently able to learn to solve the task in a non-social situation through explicit training, and jays chose the demonstrated colour at chance levels. Our results suggest that social and relatively asocial corvids differ in social information use, indicating that relatively asocial species may have secondarily lost this ability due to lack of selection pressure from an asocial environment.

Highlights

  • A wide range of corvid species are known for their complex cognitive abilities, which are hypothesised to have been present in their common ancestor, forming a ‘general cognitive tool-kit’ across this taxa (Emery & Clayton, 2004)

  • How to cite this article Miller et al (2016), Eurasian jays do not copy the choices of conspecifics, but they do show evidence of stimulus enhancement

  • Clark’s nutcrackers more accurately recovered caches they made rather than caches they observed others make, in contrast with social Mexican jays that were accurate in both conditions (Bednekoff & Balda, 1996). These results suggest that relatively asocial corvids attend less to social information than social corvids

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Summary

Introduction

A wide range of corvid species (e.g., crows, ravens, jays) are known for their complex cognitive abilities, which are hypothesised to have been present in their common ancestor, forming a ‘general cognitive tool-kit’ across this taxa (Emery & Clayton, 2004). California scrub-jays (Aphelocoma californica) show proficiency in cognitive tasks relating to memory (Clayton & Dickinson, 1998), future planning (Clayton, Emery & Dickinson, 2006; Raby et al, 2007), and social cognition through cache protection tactics (Clayton, Dally & Emery, 2007) As another example, rooks, in addition to their tool abilities, cooperate with each other to solve novel problems (Seed, Clayton & Emery, 2008) and appear to understand support relationships because they look longer at impossible scenarios (e.g., a ball suspended in mid-air rather than sitting on a table; Bird, Emery & J., 2010). New Caledonian crows (Corvus moneduloides) reason about hidden causal agents (Taylor, Miller & Gray, 2012), reason by exclusion (Jelbert, Taylor & Gray, 2015), and learn socially about novel foraging problems (Logan et al, 2016a)

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