TY - JOUR
T1 - Past experiences and future expectations generate context-dependent costs of foraging
AU - Berger-Tal, Oded
AU - Embar, Keren
AU - Kotler, Burt P.
AU - Saltz, David
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We wish to thank Ishai Hoffman for his invaluable assistance in the preparation of the experimental setup. O. B-T is supported by the Adams Fellowship Program of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities. This study was funded by an ISF grant 1397/10. This is publication number 847 of the Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
PY - 2014/11/1
Y1 - 2014/11/1
N2 - Because environments can vary over space and time in non-predictable ways, foragers must rely on estimates of resource availability and distribution to make decisions. Optimal foraging theory assumes that foraging behavior has evolved to maximize fitness and provides a conceptual framework in which environmental quality is often assumed to be fixed. Another more mechanistic conceptual framework comes from the successive contrast effects (SCE) approach in which the conditions that an individual has experienced in the recent past alter its response to current conditions. By regarding foragers’ estimation of resource patches as subjective future value assessments, SCE may be integrated into an optimal foraging framework to generate novel predictions. We released Allenby’s gerbils (Gerbillus andersoni allenbyi) into an enclosure containing rich patches with equal amounts of food and manipulated the quality of the environment over time by reducing the amount of food in most (but not all) food patches and then increasing it again. We found that, as predicted by optimal foraging models, gerbils increased their foraging activity in the rich patch when the environment became poor. However, when the environment became rich again, the gerbils significantly altered their behavior compared to the first identical rich period. Specifically, in the second rich period, the gerbils spent more time foraging and harvested more food from the patches. Thus, seemingly identical environments can be treated as strikingly different by foragers as a function of their past experiences and future expectations.
AB - Because environments can vary over space and time in non-predictable ways, foragers must rely on estimates of resource availability and distribution to make decisions. Optimal foraging theory assumes that foraging behavior has evolved to maximize fitness and provides a conceptual framework in which environmental quality is often assumed to be fixed. Another more mechanistic conceptual framework comes from the successive contrast effects (SCE) approach in which the conditions that an individual has experienced in the recent past alter its response to current conditions. By regarding foragers’ estimation of resource patches as subjective future value assessments, SCE may be integrated into an optimal foraging framework to generate novel predictions. We released Allenby’s gerbils (Gerbillus andersoni allenbyi) into an enclosure containing rich patches with equal amounts of food and manipulated the quality of the environment over time by reducing the amount of food in most (but not all) food patches and then increasing it again. We found that, as predicted by optimal foraging models, gerbils increased their foraging activity in the rich patch when the environment became poor. However, when the environment became rich again, the gerbils significantly altered their behavior compared to the first identical rich period. Specifically, in the second rich period, the gerbils spent more time foraging and harvested more food from the patches. Thus, seemingly identical environments can be treated as strikingly different by foragers as a function of their past experiences and future expectations.
KW - Bayesian foraging
KW - Experience
KW - Learning
KW - Missed opportunity cost
KW - Optimal foraging theory
KW - Successive contrast effects
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84939878905&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00265-014-1785-9
DO - 10.1007/s00265-014-1785-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84939878905
SN - 0340-5443
VL - 68
SP - 1769
EP - 1776
JO - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
JF - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
IS - 11
ER -