Publication | Open Access
Social learning in a non-social reptile ( <i>Geochelone carbonaria</i> )
199
Citations
13
References
2010
Year
Animal BehaviourBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceKin RecognitionSocial BehaviorEvolutionary BiologyGeochelone CarbonariaImitative LearningEducationSocial LivingComparative PsychologyPrimate BehaviorSocial CuesSocial LearningAnimal MindAnimal BehaviorKin Selection
The ability to learn from the actions of another is adaptive, as it is a shortcut for acquiring new information. However, the evolutionary origins of this trait are still unclear. There is evidence that group-living mammals, birds, fishes and insects can learn through observation, but this has never been investigated in reptiles. Here, we show that the non-social red-footed tortoise (Geochelone carbonaria) can learn from the actions of a conspecific in a detour task; non-observer animals (without a conspecific demonstrator) failed. This result provides the first evidence that a non-social species can use social cues to solve a task that it cannot solve through individual learning, challenging the idea that social learning is an adaptation for social living.
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