Published June 11, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Cognition and covariance in the producer-scrounger game

  • 1. Oklahoma State University
  • 2. University of Ottawa
  • 3. University College Cork
  • 4. University of Oxford
  • 5. University of Cambridge

Description

1. The producer-scrounger game is a key element of foraging ecology in many systems. Producing and scrounging typically covary negatively, but partitioning this covariance into contributions of individual plasticity and consistent between individual differences is key to understanding population level consequences of foraging strategies. Furthermore, little is known about the role cognition plays in the producer-scrounger game.

2. We investigated the role of cognition in these alternative foraging tactics in wild mixed-species flocks of great tits and blue tits, using a production learning task in which we measured individuals' speed of learning to visit the single feeder in an array that would provide them with a food reward. We also quantified the proportion of individuals' feeds that were scrounges ('proportion scrounged'); scrounging was possible if individuals visited immediately after a previous rewarded visitor. Three learning experiments–initial and two reversal learning–enabled us to estimate the repeatability and covariance of each foraging behaviour.

3. First, we examined whether individuals learned to improve their scrounging success (i.e. whether they actually obtained food by scrounging when there was an opportunity to do so). Second, we quantified the repeatability of proportion scrounged, and asked whether proportion scrounged affected production learning speed among individuals. Third, we used multivariate analyses to partition within- and among-individual components of covariance between proportion scrounged and production learning speed.

4. Individuals improved their scrounging success over time. Birds with a greater proportion scrounged took longer to learn their own rewarding feeder. Although multivariate analyses showed that covariance between proportion scrounged and learning speed was driven primarily by within-individual variation, that is, by behavioural plasticity, among-individual differences also played a role for blue tits.

5. This is the first demonstration of a cognitive trait influencing producing and scrounging in the same wild system, highlighting the importance of cognition in the use of alternative resource acquisition tactics. The results of our covariance analyses suggest the potential for genetic differences in allocation to alternative foraging tactics, which are likely species and system dependent. They also point to the need to control for different foraging tactics when studying individual cognition in the wild.

Notes

Funding provided by: European Research Council
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000781
Award Number: 617509

Funding provided by: Science Foundation Ireland
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001602
Award Number: 14/ERC/B3118

Files

FigureS1S6Data.csv

Files (21.8 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:6362ebafbe3401abc219b6c92a1d771c
17.6 MB Preview Download
md5:c43774eee7d6ac8e287b66413e929cd5
779.3 kB Preview Download
md5:999080b7935c85e7837d020212c618e1
914.9 kB Preview Download
md5:cb4dde6ab07d21db34d7e1455f4517c5
1.3 MB Preview Download
md5:f3b702302736551770fb73be5de33e60
988.5 kB Preview Download
md5:04bd766b9e958901ec7bc9f6073feb72
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:b403e2eccb7c3b85e44408870e1b7998
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:46411d7d9e607c436e6ae0e55a19b838
1.4 kB Preview Download
md5:095720e1132cd360a9940241d8c161db
2.8 kB Preview Download
md5:b8f3992aa18a5cd1bbbef9bd9e61eda9
194.4 kB Preview Download
md5:c67257825ddad11a6eb4ea2629462753
49.5 kB Preview Download