IIMYC   23581
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES MARINAS Y COSTERAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
An interindividual analysis of the relation between behavioral innovation and behavioral flexibility in urbans Caracara Chimangos, Milvago chimango
Autor/es:
BIONDI, LAURA MARINA; BÓ, MARIA SUSANA; CORDOBA, RODRIGO SANTIAGO; VASSALLO, ALDO IVAN; FUENTES, GISELLE MAGALI; PATERLINI, CARLA ANGELA
Lugar:
Puerto Iguazú, Misiones
Reunión:
Congreso; Ornithological Congress of the Americas; 2017
Resumen:
Behavioral innovation is considered an important source of phenotypic plasticity. One type of plasticity, flexibility provides individuals the ability to adjust their phenotype throughout life in response to changing environmental cues. Despite of the evidence that at taxon level the occurrence of behavioral innovation is considered an indicative of behavioral flexibility, there is only a few studies examining the relationship between these two traits at individual level. Here, the prediction that interindividual differences in behavioral innovation is a measure of behavioral flexibility variation was tested in wild-caught Caracara Chimangos, Milvago chimango, from urbanized environments. We analyzed theorrelation between the reversal learning performance (measure of behavioral flexibility) and several cognitive and non-cognitive components of novel problem-solving ability (estimate of innovation propensity). The results showed a positive relationship between acquisition and novel problem-solving speed. Reversal learning speed, however, did not correlate with solving latency, but show a significate correlation with the number of doors opened (positive), persistence (negative) and number of opening techniques changes (positive). These results show that the tendency to solve a novel problem is positively related to the associative learning ability. However, reverting a previously acquired association would not be related to the speed of resolution per se, but to the degree to which such novel problem is solved, and with the changes in the techniques used to do so.