Publication | Closed Access
Cognitive map–based navigation in wild bats revealed by a new high-throughput tracking system
187
Citations
23
References
2020
Year
NeuropsychologyCognitive MapSocial SciencesNeural MechanismMammalogyEgyptian Fruit BatsCognitive NeuroscienceAutomatic NavigationCartographyCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceAutonomous NavigationAnimal BehaviourEvolutionary BiologyWild BatsSpatial CognitionNeuroscienceAnimal MindAnimal BehaviorTracking System
Seven decades of research on the "cognitive map," the allocentric representation of space, have yielded key neurobiological insights, yet field evidence from free-ranging wild animals is still lacking. Using a system capable of tracking dozens of animals simultaneously at high accuracy and resolution, we assembled a large dataset of 172 foraging Egyptian fruit bats comprising >18 million localizations collected over 3449 bat-nights across 4 years. Detailed track analysis, combined with translocation experiments and exhaustive mapping of fruit trees, revealed that wild bats seldom exhibit random search but instead repeatedly forage in goal-directed, long, and straight flights that include frequent shortcuts. Alternative, non-map-based strategies were ruled out by simulations, time-lag embedding, and other trajectory analyses. Our results are consistent with expectations from cognitive map-like navigation and support previous neurobiological evidence from captive bats.
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