4.5 Review

Vultures as an overlooked model in cognitive ecology

期刊

ANIMAL COGNITION
卷 25, 期 3, 页码 495-507

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10071-021-01585-2

关键词

Foraging cognition; Social cognition; Socio-ecology; Vultures

资金

  1. European Union [SocForVul 659008]
  2. National Geographic Research [295-R18]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [REN 2000-1556 GLO, CGL2004-00270/BOS, CGL2009-12753-C02-02, CGL201240013-C02-01, CGL2015-66966-C2-1-2-R, RTI2018-099609B-C21]
  4. EU/FEDER [REN 2000-1556 GLO, CGL2004-00270/BOS, CGL2009-12753-C02-02, CGL201240013-C02-01, CGL2015-66966-C2-1-2-R, RTI2018-099609B-C21]
  5. Cabildo Insular de Fuerteventura
  6. Direccion General de Proteccion de la Naturaleza (Viceconsejeria de Medio Ambiente, Canarian Government)
  7. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [RTI2018-099609-B-C22, PID2019-109685 GB-I00, PID2020119514 GB-I00]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Despite unique ecological pressures, vultures exhibit a variety of innovative foraging behaviors and social adaptation skills. Further research is needed to investigate the cognitive basis of vulture skills and their implications in ecology and evolution.
Despite important recent advances in cognitive ecology, our current understanding of avian cognition still largely rests on research conducted on a few model taxa. Vultures are an ecologically distinctive group of species by being the only obligate carrion consumers across terrestrial vertebrates. Their unique scavenging lifestyle suggests they have been subject to particular selective pressures to locate scarce, unpredictable, ephemeral, and nutritionally challenging food. However, substantial variation exists among species in diet, foraging techniques and social structure of populations. Here, we provide an overview of the current knowledge on vulture cognition through a comprehensive literature review and a compilation of our own observations. We find evidence for a variety of innovative foraging behaviors, scrounging tactics, collective problem-solving abilities and tool-use, skills that are considered indicative of enhanced cognition and that bear clear connections with the eco-social lifestyles of species. However, we also find that the cognitive basis of these skills remain insufficiently studied, and identify new research areas that require further attention in the future. Despite these knowledge gaps and the challenges of working with such large animals, we conclude that vultures may provide fresh insight into our knowledge of the ecology and evolution of cognition.

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