2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10071-014-0785-5
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The role of stimulus complexity, age and experience in the expression of exploratory behaviour in the Chimango Caracara, Milvago chimango

Abstract: Exploration represents an important way by which organisms evaluate environment information. The decision of whether or not an animal should investigate environmental changes may influence the extent to which animals learn about their surroundings and cope with habitat modifications. We analysed exploration behaviour in a suburban population of a raptor species, the Chimango Caracara, Milvago chimango, by examining how age, previous experience and object complexity influence novel object exploration. Our findi… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Within the total time of visits (less than 0.1% of the recorded time), Chimango Caracara tried insistently to break an experimental egg by kicking and pecking it without success. However, their innovative and learning abilities coupled with their capacity to transmit novel behaviors through social learning (Biondi, Guido, Bo, Muzio, & Vassallo, 2015) raise the question whether Chimango Caracara specimens at Rano Raraku can eventually find the way to effectively depredate on red-tailed tropicbird eggs. Nonetheless, the presence and behavior of this raptor bird is a significant threat for red-tailed tropicbird unattended nestlings that are probably easier for these predators to catch and handle compared with an egg.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the total time of visits (less than 0.1% of the recorded time), Chimango Caracara tried insistently to break an experimental egg by kicking and pecking it without success. However, their innovative and learning abilities coupled with their capacity to transmit novel behaviors through social learning (Biondi, Guido, Bo, Muzio, & Vassallo, 2015) raise the question whether Chimango Caracara specimens at Rano Raraku can eventually find the way to effectively depredate on red-tailed tropicbird eggs. Nonetheless, the presence and behavior of this raptor bird is a significant threat for red-tailed tropicbird unattended nestlings that are probably easier for these predators to catch and handle compared with an egg.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beyond humans, primates and rodents, there are good theoretical reasons to predict that older individuals will be less exploratory and/or neophilic than younger individuals [78], and the empirical literature, for the most part, seems to agree with this prediction ( parrots and corvids: [79], geladas: [80], chimango caracara: [81][82][83]: great tits: [84,85], hyenas: [86]). In wild spotted hyenas, juveniles were less neophobic, more persistent and exhibited a greater diversity of initial exploratory behaviours, relative to adults, when they were presented with a puzzle box [86].…”
Section: Evidence For An Explore-exploit Developmental Shiftmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In birds, age has been repeatedly shown to affect the latency and duration of novel object exploration. In Milvago chimango , a neotropical raptor, juveniles (<1 year in age) approach a novel object more quickly and explore it for longer than adults (Biondi et al, 2010 , 2013 , 2015 ). Juvenile ravens, in contrast, explore objects more at 6 months of age than 3 months of age (Stöwe et al, 2006 ).…”
Section: Non-mammalian Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A few studies do validate the unsurprising conclusion that for a variety of species, the specific object does matter (Toms and Echevarria, 2014 ). For example, complex objects are explored more by birds than simple objects (Biondi et al, 2015 ), and steep objects are explored more by drosophila than shallower objects (Robie et al, 2010 ).…”
Section: Non-mammalian Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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