Clayton N S
Department of Zoology, Oxford University, UK.
Behav Brain Res. 1995 Sep;70(1):95-102. doi: 10.1016/0166-4328(95)00133-e.
Some species of birds that scatter-hoard food e.g. marsh tits, Parus palustris, use memory to retrieve stored food. These scatter-hoarding species have a larger hippocampus relative to the rest of the telencephalon than do species that store little or no food e.g. blue tits, P. caeruleus. The difference in relative hippocampal volume arises after the young have fledged from the nest and recent work on the dual ontogeny of the hippocampus and memory in hand-raised marsh tits suggests that some aspect of memory for retrieving food (whether or not stored by the bird) can stimulate hippocampal growth in juveniles at a relatively late stage in their development.
一些会分散贮藏食物的鸟类,例如沼泽山雀(Parus palustris),会利用记忆来找回贮藏的食物。相较于几乎不贮藏或不贮藏食物的鸟类,如蓝山雀(P. caeruleus),这些分散贮藏食物的鸟类相对于端脑的其他部分而言,拥有更大的海马体。相对海马体体积的差异在幼鸟离巢后出现,最近针对人工饲养的沼泽山雀海马体和记忆双重个体发育的研究表明,找回食物的记忆(无论是否由鸟类自身贮藏)的某些方面能够在幼鸟发育的相对后期刺激海马体生长。