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We are expanding (again!)
PAID research assistant / MSc positions!
Flexible research on
#cooperation / #communication / #animal_behaviour
/ #cognition / #human_evolution
/ #philosophy_of_biology

Residency in Leipzig /Konstanz is a big + !
Must be enrolled on a German university!
[email protected]

8/9 Do Arabian babblers learn food processing skills from each other? Are there different processing “traditions” across populations? More exciting questions to be addressed soon… ( an Arabian babbler from a different population handles a caterpillar) 📸 @krista_natasha
7/9 The birds selectively transported the prey to a proper substrate if the original one didn’t fit the right caterpillar manipulation. In this way, Arabian babblers can achieve higher efficiency in processing their food.
6/9 Other caterpillar species (Hyles) are strongly pounded against a hard substrate until their gut, hypothesized to be parasitized or toxic, is expelled. Consequently, the birds consume only the outer part of the prey.
5/9 Moth caterpillars (Casama) with long toxic hairs are being carefully rubbed against sandy substrates. This way, the hairs are removed, and the entire caterpillar can be eaten.
4/9 We found that Arabian babblers fit the right processing methods and substrates to overcome different protective mechanisms of their prey. Such flexibility seems to be essential to survive in a resource-scarce environment.
3/9 Arabian babblers live in extreme deserts and feed on diverse invertebrate species. These prey developed defensive mechanisms such as toxic hairs or hard cuticles. Hence, before gaining the joy of eating, babblers must manipulate the prey, and they know how to do it.
2/9 Arabian babblers use tools (i.e. present objects) as a communicative means to invite conspecifics for copulation (https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2019.00087/full) and play (https://brill.com/view/journals/beh/141/4/article-p425_3.xml?language=en). But it’s the first time their use of environmental features for foraging is described.
Intentional Presentation of Objects in Cooperatively Breeding Arabian Babblers (Turdoides squamiceps)

The emergence of intentional communication and the intentional presentation of objects have been highlighted as important steps in the ontogeny of cooperative communication in humans. Furthermore, intentional object presentation has been suggested as an extremely rare form of communication evolutionarily. Research on comparable means of communication in non-human species may therefore shed light on the selection pressures that acted upon components of human communication. However, the functions and cognitive mechanisms that underlie object presentation in animals are poorly understood. Here, we addressed these issues by investigating object presentations in wild, cooperative breeding Arabian babblers (Aves: Turdoides squamiceps). Our results showed that individuals presented objects to specific recipients. The recipients most often responded by approaching the signaler and the dyad then moveed jointly to copulate at a hidden location. We provide evidence that object presentations by Arabian babblers (i) do not represent a costly signal, as objects were not costly to acquire; (ii) were not used to trade food for sex, as the presentation of food was not more likely to result in copulation; and (iii) possessed hallmarks of first-order intentionality. These results show that intentional presentation of objects is not restricted to the primate linage and may suggest that the need to engage in cooperative interactions facilitates elaborate socio-cognitive performances.

Frontiers
1/9 Animals, like humans, developed surprising abilities to exploit resources in their habitat, even the toxic ones.
Our new paper (with Frisoni, Keynan & Griesser) describes how small desert birds process toxic caterpillars https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10071-024-01866-6
Proto-tool use for food processing in wild Arabian babblers: matching processing methods, substrates and prey types - Animal Cognition

Cognition is a powerful adaptation, enabling animals to utilise resources that are unavailable without manipulation. Tool use and food processing are examples of using cognition to overcome the protective mechanisms of food resources. Here, we describe and examine the flexibility of proto-tool use (defined as the alteration of an object through object-substrate manipulation) for food processing in a cooperatively breeding bird, the Arabian babbler (Argya squamiceps). Field observations demonstrate that the birds transport different caterpillar species to different substrate types depending on the processing method needed to prepare the caterpillar for eating. Species with toxic setae (e.g. Casama innotata) are transported to be rubbed on rough substrates (e.g. sand) before consumption, while other species (e.g. Hyles livornica) are transported to be pounded against hard substrates until their inner organs are removed and only their external body part is consumed. These results are among the few to describe flexible proto-tool use for food processing in wild animals. They thereby contribute to the taxonomic mapping of proto-tool use and food processing in non-human species, which is a fundamental step to advance comparative studies on the evolution of these behaviours and their underlying cognitive mechanisms.

SpringerLink

The GCoo-BreeD project expands AGAIN!

(https://www.exc.uni-konstanz.de/collective-behaviour/research/resources/gcoo-breed/)

We offer ***Multiple prolonged and paid*** research assistant positions in Behavioural Ecology & Evolutionary Anthropology!

Come work with a supportive and fair team and atmosphere!

Interested?

email your C.V. to Dr. Yitzchak Ben Mocha ([email protected])
Please explain shortly how you meet the above requirements + use the email title (GCoo-BreeD job).

Resources | Research | Collective Behaviour