Big brains are not enough: performance of three parrot species in the trap-tube paradigm.

Jannis Liedtke, Dagmar Werdenich, Gyula K Gajdon, Ludwig Huber, Ralf Wanker
Author Information
  1. Jannis Liedtke: Department of Biology, Zoological Institute, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany. jannisliedtke@gmx.de

Abstract

The trap-tube task has become a benchmark test for investigating physical causality in vertebrates. In this task, subjects have to retrieve food out of a horizontal tube using a tool and avoiding a trap hole in the tube. Great apes and corvids succeeded in this task. Parrots with relative brain volumes comparable to those of corvids and primates also demonstrate high cognitive abilities. We therefore tested macaws, a cockatoo, and keas on the trap-tube paradigm. All nine parrots failed to solve the task. In a simplified task, trap tubes with a slot inserted along the top were offered. The slot allowed the birds to move the reward directly with their bills. All but one individual solved this task by lifting the food over the trap. However, the parrots failed again when they were prevented from lifting the reward, although they anticipated that food will be lost when moved into the trap. We do not think that the demanding use of an external object is the main reason for the parrots' failure. Moreover, we suppose these parrots fail to consider the trap's position in the beginning of a trial and were not able to stop their behaviour and move the reward in the trap's opposite direction.

MeSH Term

Animals
Brain
Cognition
Inhibition, Psychological
Intelligence
Parrots
Tool Use Behavior

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0tasktraptrap-tubefoodparrotsrewardtubecorvidsparadigmfailedslotmoveliftingtrap'sbecomebenchmarktestinvestigatingphysicalcausalityvertebratessubjectsretrievehorizontalusingtoolavoidingholeGreatapessucceededParrotsrelativebrainvolumescomparableprimatesalsodemonstratehighcognitiveabilitiesthereforetestedmacawscockatookeasninesolvesimplifiedtubesinsertedalongtopofferedallowedbirdsdirectlybillsoneindividualsolvedHoweverpreventedalthoughanticipatedwilllostmovedthinkdemandinguseexternalobjectmainreasonparrots'failureMoreoversupposefailconsiderpositionbeginningtrialablestopbehaviouroppositedirectionBigbrainsenough:performancethreeparrotspecies

Similar Articles

Cited By