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Learning from others: an invasive lizard uses social information from both conspecifics and heterospecifics.

Isabel Damas-MoreiraDaniel OliveiraJoana L SantosJulia L RileyDavid James HarrisMartin J Whiting
Published in: Biology letters (2018)
Species that are able to solve novel problems through social learning from either a conspecific or a heterospecific may gain a significant advantage in new environments. We tested the ability of a highly successful invasive species, the Italian wall lizard Podarcis sicula, to solve a novel foraging task when social information was available from both a conspecific and an unfamiliar heterospecific (Podarcis bocagei). We found that Italian wall lizards that had access to social information made fewer errors, regardless of whether the demonstrator was a conspecific or a heterospecific, compared to Italian wall lizards that individually learnt the same task. We suggest that social learning could be a previously underappreciated, advantageous mechanism facilitating invasions.
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