AI Article Synopsis

  • Cognition is crucial for animals to adapt to their environments, but the ecological factors influencing its evolution are unclear.
  • Researchers tested 13 species of lacertid lizards on various cognitive tasks and examined the link between their performance and ecological variables like resource availability and habitat complexity.
  • While cognitive abilities varied among species, these differences did not strongly correlate with their ecological conditions or life history, except that species in more variable environments showed reduced behavioral flexibility, possibly due to energy limitations.

Article Abstract

Cognition is an essential tool for animals to deal with environmental challenges. Nonetheless, the ecological forces driving the evolution of cognition throughout the animal kingdom remain enigmatic. Large-scale comparative studies on multiple species and cognitive traits have been advanced as the best way to facilitate our understanding of cognitive evolution, but such studies are rare. Here, we tested 13 species of lacertid lizards (Reptilia: Lacertidae) using a battery of cognitive tests measuring inhibitory control, problem-solving, and spatial and reversal learning. Next, we tested the relationship between species' performance and (a) resource availability (temperature and precipitation), habitat complexity (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index), and habitat variability (seasonality) in their natural habitat and (b) their life history (size at hatching and maturity, clutch size, and frequency). Although species differed markedly in their cognitive abilities, such variation was mostly unrelated to their ecology and life history. Yet, species living in more variable environments exhibited lower behavioral flexibility, likely due to energetic constrains in such habitats. Our standardized protocols provide opportunities for collaborative research, allowing increased sample sizes and replication, essential for moving forward in the field of comparative cognition. Follow-up studies could include more detailed measures of habitat structure and look at other potential selective drivers such as predation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evo.14618DOI Listing

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