Login / Signup

Cognitive map-based navigation in wild bats revealed by a new high-throughput tracking system.

Sivan ToledoDavid ShohamiIngo SchiffnerEmmanuel LourieYotam OrchanYoav BartanRan Nathan
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Seven decades of research on the "cognitive map," the allocentric representation of space, have yielded key neurobiological insights, yet field evidence from free-ranging wild animals is still lacking. Using a system capable of tracking dozens of animals simultaneously at high accuracy and resolution, we assembled a large dataset of 172 foraging Egyptian fruit bats comprising >18 million localizations collected over 3449 bat-nights across 4 years. Detailed track analysis, combined with translocation experiments and exhaustive mapping of fruit trees, revealed that wild bats seldom exhibit random search but instead repeatedly forage in goal-directed, long, and straight flights that include frequent shortcuts. Alternative, non-map-based strategies were ruled out by simulations, time-lag embedding, and other trajectory analyses. Our results are consistent with expectations from cognitive map-like navigation and support previous neurobiological evidence from captive bats.
Keyphrases
  • high density
  • high throughput
  • genetic diversity
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics
  • single molecule