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Eavesdropping squirrels reduce their future value of food under the perceived presence of cache robbers. | LitMetric

Eavesdropping squirrels reduce their future value of food under the perceived presence of cache robbers.

Am Nat

Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University, MS 3131, Lubbock, Texas 79409, USA.

Published: March 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Squirrels' caching behavior is influenced by the presence of potential thieves, like blue jays, affecting their food valuation.
  • Researchers used playback of jay calls to examine how squirrels estimate the risk of food theft and found that they lowered the value of cacheable nuts in response.
  • The study suggests squirrels use vocal cues from jays to assess nearby risks and adjust their caching strategies accordingly, indicating a complex communication system among tree seed consumers in eastern forests.

Article Abstract

Caching behavior frequently occurs within a social context that may include heterospecific cache pilferers. All else equal, the value of cacheable food should decline as the probability of cache recovering declines. We manipulated gray squirrels' (Sciurus carolinensis) estimate of the probability of cache recovery using experimental playbacks of the vocalizations of a potential cache robber, the blue jay (Cyanocitta cristata). We used giving-up densities (GUDs) to quantify relative changes in squirrels' valuation of cacheable and noncacheable foods. We collected GUDs during playback experiments to test whether squirrels (1) eavesdrop on vocalizations to detect jay presence, (2) devalue cacheable food in the (perceived) presence of jays (i.e., perceive jays as cache pilferers), and (3) are sensitive to distant effects (i.e., lower devaluation of cacheable food at sites far from the perceived location of jays). Consistent with our predictions, squirrels decreased the value of cacheable hazelnuts by two nuts, on average, during jay playbacks, but only at foraging stations near the jay playback sites. We conclude that through eavesdropping, squirrels assess site-specific risks of cache pilfering and alter their caching behavior to reduce the likelihood of pilferage. Evidence suggests that tree seed consumers in eastern deciduous forests exist within a complex communication network.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/527497DOI Listing

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