Pravosudov Vladimir V, Clayton Nicola S
Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, University of California, Davis 95616-8519, USA.
Behav Neurosci. 2002 Aug;116(4):515-22.
To test the hypothesis that accurate cache recovery is more critical for birds that live in harsh conditions where the food supply is limited and unpredictable, the authors compared food caching, memory, and the hippocampus of black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapilla) from Alaska and Colorado. Under identical laboratory conditions, Alaska chickadees (a) cached significantly more food; (b) were more efficient at cache recovery: (c) performed more accurately on one-trial associative learning tasks in which birds had to rely on spatial memory, but did not differ when tested on a nonspatial version of this task; and (d) had significantly larger hippocampal volumes containing more neurons compared with Colorado chickadees. The results support the hypothesis that these population differences may reflect adaptations to a harsh environment.
为了验证对于生活在食物供应有限且不可预测的恶劣环境中的鸟类而言,精确的贮藏物找回更为关键这一假设,作者比较了来自阿拉斯加和科罗拉多的黑顶山雀(Poecile atricapilla)的食物贮藏、记忆和海马体。在相同的实验室条件下,阿拉斯加山雀:(a)贮藏的食物显著更多;(b)在贮藏物找回方面更高效;(c)在鸟类必须依靠空间记忆的单次联想学习任务中表现更准确,但在该任务的非空间版本测试中没有差异;(d)与科罗拉多山雀相比,其海马体体积显著更大,且含有更多神经元。结果支持了这样的假设,即这些种群差异可能反映了对恶劣环境的适应。