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Data and code for reproducing analyses and figures from Wild & Chimento, et al. 2021

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Complex foraging behaviours in wild birds emerge from social learning and recombination of components

Wild, S.†, Chimento, M.†, McMahon, K., Farine, D. R., Sheldon, B. C., Aplin, L. M.

Data and code for reproducing analyses and figures from Wild & Chimento, et al. 2021 DOI

Abstract

Recent well-documented cases of cultural evolution towards increasing efficiency in non-human animals have led some authors to propose that other animals are also capable of cumulative cultural evolution, where traits become more refined and/or complex over time. Yet few comparative examples exist of traits increasing in complexity, and experimental tests remain scarce. In a previous study, we introduced a foraging innovation into replicate subpopulations of great tits, the ‘sliding-door puzzle’. Here we track diffusion of a second ‘dial puzzle’, before introducing a two-step puzzle that combines both actions. We mapped social networks across two generations to ask if individuals could: 1) recombine socially-learned traits, and 2) socially transmit a two-step trait. Our results show birds could recombine skills into a more complex foraging behaviour, and naïve birds across both generations could learn the two-step trait. However, closer interrogation revealed that acquisition was not achieved entirely through social learning—rather, birds socially learned components before reconstructing full solutions asocially. As a consequence, singular cultural traditions failed to emerge, although subpopulations of birds shared preferences for a subset of behavioural variants. Our results show that while tits can socially learn complex foraging behaviours, these may need to be scaffolded by rewarding each component.

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Data and code for reproducing analyses and figures from Wild & Chimento, et al. 2021

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