Litcius/Paper detail

Experimental evidence of memory-based foraging decisions in a large wild mammal

Nathan Ranc, P. R. Moorcroft, Federico Ossi, Francesca Cagnacci

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences96 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) rely on memory, not perception, to track the spatiotemporal dynamics of resources within their home range. Roe deer foraging decisions were primarily based on recent experience (half-lives of 0.9 and 5.6 d for attribute and spatial memory, respectively), enabling them to adapt to sudden changes in resource availability. The proposed memory-based model was able to both quantify the cognitive processes underlying roe deer behavior and accurately predict how they shifted resource use during the experiment. Our study highlights the fact that animal foraging decisions are based on incomplete information on the locations of available resources, a factor that is critical to developing accurate predictions of animal spatial behavior but is typically not accounted for in analyses of animal movement in the wild.

Topics & Concepts

ForagingCapreolusRoe deerHome rangeAnimal cognitionResource (disambiguation)Cognitive psychologyPerceptionEcologyCognitionOptimal foraging theoryRange (aeronautics)MammalComputer scienceBiologyPsychologyHabitatNeuroscienceComputer networkMaterials scienceComposite materialWildlife Ecology and ConservationAnimal Behavior and ReproductionPrimate Behavior and Ecology