4.8 Article

Speed Determines Leadership and Leadership Determines Learning during Pigeon Flocking

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 23, Pages 3132-3137

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.10.044

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Royal Society
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
  3. European Research Council (EU) [227878]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [227878] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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A key question in collective behavior is how individual differences structure animal groups, affect the flow of information, and give some group members greater weight in decisions [1-8]. Depending on what factors contribute to leadership, despotic decisions could either improve decision accuracy or interfere with swarm intelligence [9, 10]. The mechanisms behind leadership are therefore important for understanding its functional significance. In this study, we compared pigeons' relative influence over flock direction to their solo flight characteristics. A pigeon's degree of leadership was predicted by its ground speeds from earlier solo flights, but not by the straightness of its previous solo route. By testing the birds individually after a series of flock flights, we found that leaders had learned straighter homing routes than followers, as we would expect if followers attended less to the landscape and more to conspecifics. We repeated the experiment from three homing sites using multiple independent flocks and found individual consistency in leadership and speed. Our results suggest that the leadership hierarchies observed in previous studies could arise from differences in the birds' typical speeds. Rather than reflecting social preferences that optimize group decisions, leadership may be an inevitable consequence of heterogeneous flight characteristics within self-organized flocks. We also found that leaders learn faster and become better navigators, even if leadership is not initially due to navigational ability. The roles that individuals fall into during collective motion might therefore have far-reaching effects on how they learn about the environment and use social information.

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