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An investigation of quantity discrimination in Clark’s nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana).
22
Citations
35
References
2014
Year
Animal BehaviourCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesForagingFitnessNucifraga ColumbianaBioarchaeologyEvolutionary BiologyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionEducationAvian EvolutionQuantity DiscriminationAnthropologyAnimal BehaviorAdaptive Specialization
We examined quantity discrimination in the Clark's nutcracker (Nucifraga columbiana), a corvid bird with a strong dependence upon caching and recovering nuts. We presented 2 sets of nuts simultaneously, in 21 different conditions, to see if the nutcrackers could choose the larger of the 2 quantities. The nutcrackers displayed a strong ability to discriminate quantities of nuts. Like other animals tested previously, the nutcrackers' performance decreased as the ratio of the 2 quantities approached 1. Interestingly, at constant distances, the nutcrackers did not have more difficulty with contrasts containing larger quantities. Thus, nutcrackers have a fine sensitivity for discriminating between 2 quantities. We review the relevant literature and explore the possibility that nutcrackers, like some other birds, may have developed a keen ability to discriminate quantities. This ability may have developed as an adaptive specialization to cope with their scatter-hoarding ecology, though the evidence for such a conclusion is mixed.
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