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Specializations of birds that attend army ant raids: an ecological approach to cognitive and behavioral studies.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

O'Donnell, Sean 
Logan, Corina J 
Clayton, Nicola S 

Abstract

Tropical birds forage at army ant raids on several continents. Obligate foraging at army ant raids evolved several times in the Neotropical true antbird family (Thamnophilidae), and recent evidence suggests a diversity of bird species from other families specialize to varying degrees on army ant exploitation. Army ant raids offer access to high prey densities, but the ant colonies are mobile and widely spaced. Successful army ant exploitation requires solving a complex foraging problem because army ant raids are unpredictable in space and time. Birds can counteract the challenges posed by the ants by using strategies that raise their chances of detecting army ant raids, and birds can use additional strategies to track army ant colonies they have located. Some features of army ant biology, such as their conspicuous swarms and columns, above-ground activity, and regular cycles of behavior, provide opportunities for birds to increase their effectiveness at exploiting raids. Changes in sensory, cognitive and behavioral systems may all contribute to specialized army ant exploitation in a bird population. The combination of specializations that are employed may vary independently among bird species and populations. The degree of army ant exploitation by birds varies geographically with latitude and elevation, and with historical patterns such as centers of distribution of obligate thamnophilid antbirds. We predict the set of specializations a given bird population exhibits will depend on local ecology, as well as phylogenetic history. Comparative approaches that focus on these patterns may indicate ecological and evolutionary factors that have shaped the costs and benefits of this foraging strategy. The development of army ant exploitation in individual birds is poorly understood, and individual expression of these specializations may depend on a combination of genetic adaptation with cognitive plasticity, possibly including social and experiential learning. Future studies that measure developmental changes and quantify individual differences in army ant exploitation are needed to establish the mechanisms underlying this behavior.

Description

Keywords

Aggression, Animals, Ants, Behavior, Animal, Birds, Cognition, Feeding Behavior, Interpersonal Relations, Learning, Territoriality

Journal Title

Behav Processes

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0376-6357
1872-8308

Volume Title

91

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
This work was supported by National Science Foundation grant IOS-1209072 and Drexel University funds (to S.O’D.); the Gates Cambridge Scholarship and Murray Edwards College Overseas Bursary (to C.L.); and the University of Cambridge, Clare College and BBSRC (to N.S.C.).