Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2426707 | Behavioural Processes | 2014 | 4 Pages |
•We tested whether spotted salamanders can associate visual landmarks with food.•Salamanders trained with landmarks preferred the landmark quadrant during testing.•Visual landmarks provide beacons for salamanders to locate food patches.
Learning to use a landmark as a beacon to locate resources is one of the simplest forms of spatial learning. We tested whether landmark learning occurs in a semifossorial salamander that migrates annually to breeding ponds as adults. Juvenile spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) were tested in square containers with a plastic feeding dish in each corner, and a piece of earthworm was placed in one randomly-chosen dish. For landmark-trained salamanders, a rock was placed beside the dish containing the prey. For control salamanders, the rock was placed beside a randomly selected feeding dish. Each salamander was trained once every 2 days for 30 days. Significantly more landmark-trained salamanders than control salamanders entered the landmark area first, and landmark-trained individuals had faster latencies to enter the landmark area and longer stay-times. These results suggest that spotted salamanders are able to locate resources by associating their positions with landmarks.