A team of researchers has just showed that reptiles may have
better long-term memories than previously believed. Red-footed tortoises were
trained to recognize specific visual cues associated with food and still
remembered the cues when retested 18 months later. The details are in a paper
that was just published in the journal Biology Letters.
Long-term memory can mean the difference between survival and
death when food is scarce. Animals that can remember the locations of
consistent food sources don’t have to exert as much energy looking for food.
Although researchers have showed that reptiles can remember specific locations
and cues, scientists were unsure how long they could retain this type of
information. Some reptile species, such as the red-footed tortoise (Chelonoidis
carbonaria), can live for decades. This long lifespan prompted scientists
to test if red-footed tortoises could remember food locations after a
significant amount of time had passed.
Researchers from the University of Lincoln in the United Kingdom
trained captive red-footed tortoises to associate specific food types and
quantities with different colored sheets. The tortoises quickly learned which
colors signified the location of their favorite mango-flavored food (as opposed
to a less-preferred apple jelly). They also learned to associate colored sheets
with different food quantities and chose to walk towards the color of a sheet
that would contain large amounts of food. When the research team tested the
tortoises 18 months later, the reptiles remembered all of the cues—preferring
colored sheets that would contain large amounts of their preferred food item.
The study demonstrates that red-footed tortoises have excellent
long-term memories for finding food sources and can remember visual cues
associated with food for over a year. The team points out that the tortoises
would naturally be found in forest habitats, which tend to have resources
spread between patches of land. A long-term memory would help the reptiles
avoid wasting energy as they search the forest for food. Although red-footed
tortoises were the only reptile species tested, it’s possible that other
long-lived reptiles have similar memory abilities.
REFERENCE
Soldati et al. Long-term memory of relative reward values. Biology
Letters (2017).
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