Abstract

The ability to solve novel problems is crucial for individual fitness. However, studies on problem solving are usually done on few taxa, with species with low encephalization quotient being rarely tested. Here, we aimed to study problem solving in a non-domesticated ungulate species, European bison, with two experimental tasks. In the first task, five individuals were presented with a hanging barrel filled with food, which could either be directly accessed (control condition) or which could only be reached by pushing a tree stump in the enclosure below it and stepping on it (experimental condition). In the second task, five individuals were repeatedly fed by an experimenter using a novel bucket to retrieve food from a bag. Then, three identical buckets were placed in the enclosure, while the experimenter waited outside with the bag without feeding the bison, either with a bucket (control condition) or without it (experimental condition). In the first task, no bison moved the stump behind the barrel and/or stepped on it to reach the food. In the second task, two individuals solved the task by pushing the bucket within the experimenter's reach, twice in the experimental and twice in the control condition. We suggest that bison showed a limited ability to solve novel problems, and discuss the implications for their understanding of the functional aspects of the tasks.

Highlights

  • The ability to spontaneously solve novel problems plays a crucial role in the survival and fitness of individuals, by facilitating the royalsocietypublishing.org/journal/rsos R

  • For Model 1, the full-null model comparison was significant (GLMM: χ2 = 22.48, d.f. = 1, p < 0.001), with latency to approach the barrel being significantly higher in the Experimental than in the Control condition

  • None of the five study individuals moved the tree stump behind the barrel with food and/or stepped on it to reach for the food when it was out of reach

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to spontaneously solve novel problems plays a crucial role in the survival and fitness of individuals, by facilitating the royalsocietypublishing.org/journal/rsos R. The study of problem solving has fascinated scientists for at least a century [6]. Experimental studies on problem solving have so far only included few taxa. Most studies have been conducted on primates [7,8,9,10,11], birds [12,13,14,15], canines [16,17,18] and rodents [19]. Some notable exceptions include elephants [20], dolphins [21] and different carnivore species [22,23,24,25]

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