Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia.
School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2023 Jun 5;378(1878):20220101. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0101. Epub 2023 Apr 17.
Animals gathered around a specific location or resource may represent mixed-species aggregations or mixed-species groups. Patterns of individuals choosing to join these groups can provide insight into the information processing underlying these decisions. However, we still have little understanding of how much information these decisions are based upon. We used data on 12 parrot species to test what kind of information each species may use about others to make decisions about which mixed-species aggregations to participate in. We used co-presence and joining patterns with categorization and model fitting methods to test how these species could be making grouping decisions. Species generally used a simpler lower-category method to choose which other individuals to associate with, rather than basing these decisions on species-level information. We also found that the best-fit models for decision-making differed across the 12 species and included different kinds of information. We found that not only does this approach provide a framework to test hypotheses about why individuals join or leave mixed-species aggregations, it also provides insight into what features each parrot could have been using to make their decisions. While not exhaustive, this approach provides a novel examination of the potential features that species could use to make grouping decisions and could provide a link to the perceptive and cognitive abilities of the animals making these minute-by-minute decisions. This article is part of the theme issue 'Mixed-species groups and aggregations: shaping ecological and behavioural patterns and processes'.
动物聚集在特定的地点或资源周围可能代表了混合物种的聚集或混合物种群体。个体选择加入这些群体的模式可以深入了解这些决策背后的信息处理。然而,我们仍然不太了解这些决策是基于多少信息做出的。我们使用了 12 种鹦鹉物种的数据来测试每种物种可能会利用其他物种的哪些信息来做出关于参与哪些混合物种聚集的决策。我们使用共存和加入模式以及分类和模型拟合方法来测试这些物种如何做出分组决策。物种通常使用一种更简单的低类别方法来选择与哪些其他个体进行关联,而不是基于物种水平的信息做出这些决策。我们还发现,决策制定的最佳拟合模型在 12 个物种之间存在差异,并且包含不同类型的信息。我们发现,这种方法不仅为测试关于个体为什么加入或离开混合物种聚集的假设提供了一个框架,还深入了解了每个鹦鹉可能用来做出决策的特征。虽然不详尽,但这种方法提供了对物种可能用来做出分组决策的潜在特征的新的考察,并为动物做出这些每分钟的决策的感知和认知能力提供了联系。本文是主题为“混合物种群体和聚集:塑造生态和行为模式和过程”的特刊的一部分。