Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Is habitat selection in the wild shaped by individual‐level cognitive biases in orientation strategy?

Christine E. Beardsworth; Mark A. Whiteside; Philippa R. Laker; Ran Nathan; Yotam Orchan; Sivan Toledo; Jayden O. van Horik; Joah R. Madden

Ecology Letters · 2021

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Summary

Cognitive biases for encoding spatial information (orientation strategies) in relation to self (egocentric) or landmarks (allocentric) differ between species or populations according to the habitats they occupy. Whether biases in orientation strategy determine early habitat selection or if individuals adapt their biases following experience is unknown. We determined orientation strategies of pheasants, Phasianus colchicus, using a dual-strategy maze with an allocentric probe trial, before releasing them (n = 20) into a novel landscape, where we monitored their movement and habitat selection. In general, pheasants selected for woodland over non-woodland habitat, but allocentric-biased individuals exhibited weaker avoidance of non-woodland habitat, where we expected allocentric navigation to

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1111/ele.13694
Catalogue ID
NRmo9rin9c-0xt
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