Social learning data in a foraging setting for Heliconius erato
- 1. Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte
- 2. Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
- 3. University of Bristol
Description
Insects may acquire social information by active communication and through inadvertent social cues. In a foraging setting, the latter may indicate the presence and quality of resources. Although social learning in foraging contexts is prevalent in eusocial species, this behaviour has been hypothesised to also exist between conspecifics in non-social species with sophisticated behaviours, including Heliconius butterflies. Heliconius are the only butterfly genus with active pollen feeding, a dietary innovation associated with a specialised, spatially faithful foraging behaviour known as trap-lining. Long-standing hypotheses suggest that Heliconius may acquire trap-line information by following experienced individuals. Indeed, Heliconius often aggregate in social roosts, which could act as 'information centres', and present conspecific following behaviour, enhancing opportunities for social learning. Here, we provide a direct test of social learning ability in Heliconius using an associative learning task in which naïve individuals completed a colour preference test in the presence of demonstrators trained to feed randomly or with a strong colour preference. We found no evidence that Heliconius erato, which roost socially, used social information in this task. Combined with existing field studies our results add to data which contradict the hypothesised role of social learning in Heliconius foraging behaviour.
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Related works
- Is derived from
- 10.5281/zenodo.7657455 (DOI)
- Is source of
- 10.5281/zenodo.6621017 (DOI)