Space Industry and Business News  
Birds Plan For Future Desires

The Western scrub-jay.
by Staff Writers
Cambridge UK (SPX) Apr 27, 2007
For a long time, it had been argued that only humans can draw on past experiences to plan for the future, whereas animals were considered "stuck in time." However, it has become clear that some animals can indeed plan for future needs. Surprisingly, the most convincing examples of future planning are not derived from our closest relatives, the apes, but from a bird, the Western scrub-jay.

The Western scrub-jay is native to the western United States, and, like squirrels and other food-caching animals, these birds readily store food for the future and recover their caches at a later date.

It was already known that the jays can plan ahead and store food in places where they have learned they will be hungry the next morning and where they know the type of food will not be available.

But a key issue had remained unresolved-namely, whether the birds can plan ahead in response to a motivation or desire they do not experience in the present. In other words: Can the birds know what they are going to want in the future?

In new research, appearing online on April 26th in the journal Current Biology, published by Cell Press, Sergio Correia, Tony Dickinson, and Nicky Clayton of the University of Cambridge, UK, used a phenomenon called "specific satiety" to address this issue. Like many other animals, when sated of one type of food, Western scrub-jays prefer to eat and store another type of food.

Correia and colleagues used this effect to ask whether the birds prefer to store the food they want now or the food they think they will want when they come to recover their caches in the future.

At the start of the experiment, the birds stored the food they desired at the time, but the birds switched to storing the food that was valuable at the time of recovery rather than the one they wanted to eat at the time of caching.

These experiments provide the first-ever evidence that animals can plan future actions not only on the basis of what they currently desire, but also on the basis of what they anticipate they will desire in the future. This is another striking example of how animals show features of intelligence that were once thought to be uniquely human.

The researchers include Sergio P.C. Correia of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, UK and Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia in Oeiras, Portugal; Anthony Dickinson and Nicola S. Clayton of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, UK.

Related Links
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Rampaging Elephants Force Indonesians To Relocate
Jakarta (AFP) April 25, 2007
Thousands of Indonesians will be relocated on Sumatra island after wild elephants repeatedly attacked their villages killing six people, officials said Wednesday. The local government will move about 10,000 people living in Bukit Barisan National Park, a protected habitat for the animals whose numbers on the island are fast diminishing.







  • Couch Potatoes On Track For Virtual World
  • All Of Russia Will Have Internet And Phone Access
  • Wildblue High-Speed Internet Via Satellite Triples Capacity With New Satellite
  • Publish, Perish Attitudes Make Profs Balk At Online Publication

  • Equator Space Launch Plan
  • Orbital Minotaur Launches US Missile Defense Agency NFIRE Satellite
  • Minotaur Launched From NASA Wallops Flight Facility
  • ASTRA 1L Integrated To Ariane 5 Dual-Payload Dispenser System

  • Australia Fears Jet Flight Guilt Could Hit Tourism
  • Nondestructive Testing Keeps Bagram Aircraft Flying
  • New FAA Oceanic Air Traffic System Designed By Lockheed Martin Fully Operational
  • NASA Seeks New Research Proposals

  • TSAT Team Moves Closer To Developing Flight-Ready Laser Terminals
  • Raytheon To Supply Canada With Enhanced Position Location Reporting System Terminals
  • Intelsat To Test Internet Routing In Space For The US Military
  • Northrop Grumman And LockMart Team Up For Integrated Air And Missile Defense Battle Command

  • New Family Of Pseudo-Metallic Chemicals Could Create New Electronic Materials
  • Ultrasound Upgrade Produces Images That Work Like 3-D Movies
  • Scientists Design New Super-Hard Material
  • Everything Starts With Recognition

  • Dodgen Joins Northrop Grumman As Vice President Of Strategy For Missile Systems Business
  • Townsend To Lead Ball Aerospace Exploration Systems In Huntsville
  • NASA Nobel Prize Recipient To Lead Chief Scientist Office
  • Kathryn Kynard Plays Key Role In Ares I Upper Stage Engine Development

  • AIM Soars To The Edge Of Space For Unique Earth Observation Mission
  • Cloudsat Standard Data Products Released To Science Community
  • Envisat Symposium 2007 Kicks Off In Switzerland
  • Scientists Meet To Review Envisat Results After Five Years Of Operations

  • EU Parliament Deeply Concerned About Troubled Galileo Project
  • Boeing Demonstrates Key GPS 3 Features In Critical Program Review
  • Safer Air Traffic With EGNOS
  • Boeing-Led Team Developing Surface Navigation Concept For DARPA

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement