APS126 Papers and Practicals Flashcards

1
Q

Japanese tits (Parus minor) produce specific alarm calls when…

A

and only when encountering a predatory snake

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2
Q

Simply hearing the snake alarm call causes…

A

tits to become more visually perceptive to objects resembling snakes

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3
Q

During playback of a snake-specific alarm call, tits…

A

approach a wooden stick being moved in a snake-like fashion, but do not respond to the same stick when hearing other call types or if the stick’s movement is dissimilar to that of a snake

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4
Q

Thus, before detecting a real snake, tits…

A

retrieve its visual image from snake-specific alarm calls and use this to search out snakes

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5
Q

This tit study provides evidence for..

A

a call-evoked visual search image in a nonhuman animal

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6
Q

The japanese tit produces acoustically…

A

distinct alarm calls in response to different predators

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7
Q

When incubating eggs in the nest, adult tits respond to snake-specific alarm calls by…

A

immediately escaping out of the nest cavity, allowing them to evade attacks from snakes
- when outside of the nest cavity they look down at the ground nearby their nest tree, suggesting an adaptive behaviour to locate approaching snakes

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8
Q

What was used to represent the snake?

A
Short stick (18cm) cut from dead branch manipulated on a string from a distance, pulled along a tree trunk (no other animals do this apart from snakes in this area)
- swinging from a low shrub used as non-snake like movement - approach much less common
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9
Q

The crow study was looking at what..

A

New Caledonian crows do with their tools between successive prey extractions, and whether they express tool “safekeeping” behaviour more often when the costs or likelihood of tool loss are high.

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10
Q

Birds generally took care of their tools…

A
  • 84% of 176 prey extractions (74% trapping underfoot, 26% storing in holes)
  • also observed these behaviours in the wild
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11
Q

Subjects kept tools safe significantly more often when…

A

foraging at height

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12
Q

Subjects stored tools significantly more in holes when…

A

extracting more demanding prey (under these conditions, foot-trapping proved challenging)

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13
Q

In arboreal environments, safekeeping can prevent … … …, removing a potentially important constraint on the … of habitual and complex … …

A

costly tool losses,
evolution,
tool behaviour

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14
Q

How can tools incur significant costs?

A

Time and energy spent searching for, manufacturing and transporting tools

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15
Q

NC crows are forced by their anatomy to…

A

put down foraging tools in order to process and eat extracted prey items
- inevitably increases risk of accidental tool loss

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16
Q

The NC crow experiments were tested at two different heights:

A
  • ground

- elevated

17
Q

The NC crow experiments were tested with prey that required different handling times:

A
  • easy &
  • difficult
    conditions
18
Q

The crow sample for analyses consisted of..

A

5 females (2 juvenile, 2 immature, 1 adult) and 4 males (3 immature, 1 adult)