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      Roosts as information centres: social learning of food preferences in bats.

      Biology letters
      Animals, Chiroptera, physiology, Feeding Behavior, Food Preferences, Learning, Social Behavior

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          Abstract

          The short-tailed fruit bat, Carollia perspicillata, lives in groups in tree hollows and caves. To investigate whether these roosts might serve as information centres, we tested whether individuals' preferences for novel foods could be enhanced through social learning at the roost. We also determined whether socially learned preferences for novel foods were reversed through interaction with other roost mates by simulating changes in available food resources such as those associated with variations in timing of fruit production in different plant species. Bats exhibited socially induced preferences that were readily reversible. We suggest that for frugivorous bats, roosts can serve as centres for information exchange about novel and familiar, ephemeral foods without requiring conspecific recruitment to these resources.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          17148131
          1965196
          10.1098/rsbl.2004.0252

          Chemistry
          Animals,Chiroptera,physiology,Feeding Behavior,Food Preferences,Learning,Social Behavior
          Chemistry
          Animals, Chiroptera, physiology, Feeding Behavior, Food Preferences, Learning, Social Behavior

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