We find that male—but not female—winter social associations are correlated with breeding location; males bred closer to their winter associates, and more socially connected males tended to breed closer to the roost location.
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🎉New paper alert 🥳
Does proximity of breeding hollows influence foraging associations in wild cockatoos?
doi.org/10.1098/rsbl...
(🧵—1/2)
With @lucymaplin.bsky.social , A. Csak
Hi all! I am new to Bluesky so I am just posting some of my earlier research.
So grateful for my amazing collaborators who made this project possible. And of course our cockies—especially Heidi (wing tag 48, on pic below) who helped supervising this pandemonium 🦜
(🧵6/6)
Julia Penndorf
Odd Jacobson
Julia Penndorf
Julia Penndorf
GPS is relatively new. So how can we study long-term animal movements? Our approach in @Ecology_Letters transforms historic location records (pre-GPS) into valuable data, revealing capuchins' responses to #climate and demographic change. #openaccess...
Finally, how individuals extracted almond kernels ?
(>500 videos, 147 birds, 5 roosts)
Openings were more similar :
- between close-by roosts,
- between highly connected roosts
- between social associates
This indirectly suggests that openings are likely to also be socially learned.
(🧵5/6)
Ecology of Animal Societies
At 2 roost sites, we trained 2 birds to eat dyed almonds (red/blue). Once presented to the group, naïve individuals ate almonds within minutes. In the control group, almonds were only eaten after a visiting bird introduced the behaviour (>99% of solves through social learning 🤯)
(🧵2/6)
🎉🦜NEW PAPER ALERT 🦜🎉
Which social learning biases underly the acquisition of novel food in wild parrots ?
We (@lucymaplin.bsky.social, @bjjbarrett.bsky.social, @sonjawild.bsky.social, @drjohnmartin.bsky.social) presented >700 cockies with a novel, artificial food (🧵1/6)
Age and sex did not influence whether individuals socially learned, but did influence *how* they learned:
- juveniles were conformists, disproportionally preferring the most chosen colour
- adults preferentially copied members of the same roost
(🧵3/6)
The behaviour spread to neighbouring roosts located between 2-10 km apart within days.
(🧵4/6)
Video
Julia Penndorf
Julia Penndorf
Julia Penndorf
Julia Penndorf
Julia Penndorf
📣 #PhDOpportunity in Geelong, Australia
Ever wondered how urbanisation affects sleep in birds? 🐦 Interested in #behaviouralecology and #biologging? Come and work with me and Kate Buchanan at @deakinuniversity.bsky.social!
Applications close 31 May
Details: www.deakin.edu.au/study/fees-a...
Conduct research in in urban bird behaviour with Deakin's PhD scholarship.
Adopting novel food is vital to colonize novel environments, but what is the role of social learning? Study of urban #cockatoos by @clevercockierp.bsky.social shows them to rapidly adopt novel food via #SocialLearning, with juveniles showing conformist preferences @plosbiology.org 🧪 plos.io/4uq6NVq