Puppy see, puppy do: Wolves and dogs know where you hid that treat

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A wolf from the Wolf Mountain Sanctuary, Lucerne Valley, United States.  Image Credit: Courtney Clayton, Unsplash, CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)
A wolf from the Wolf Mountain Sanctuary, Lucerne Valley, United States. Image Credit: Courtney Clayton, Unsplash, CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)

In a study involving nine timber wolves and eight mongrel dogs, both animals performed better at finding hidden food if they’d watched the food being hidden by a person – suggesting they remembered where it was and didn't rely solely on scent to find it. Austrian researchers tested the ability of each animal to find four, six, or eight hidden snacks, having seen someone hiding them or without seeing them. The team found both dogs and wolves found more of the first five hidden foods faster, and with less distance travelled, if they saw the food being hidden. This suggests both animals are capable of observational spatial memory, the team says. Whether or not they saw the food being hidden, wolves outperformed the dogs, which they suggest may be due to persistence and food-related motivation rather than a better memory.

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From: PLOS

Wolves and dogs appear to remember where people hid food

However, wolves and dogs may differ in food-related motivation and persistence

In a study involving several wolves and dogs, both animals performed better at finding hidden food if they had observed the food being hidden by a person—suggesting that they remembered where the food was, and did not rely solely on scent to find it. Sebastian Vetter of the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Austria, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on September 13.

Many species transmit important information through social learning, where one individual learns by observing or interacting with another. Prior research has suggested that wolves and dogs—who were domesticated from wolves—are capable of a form of social learning known as observational spatial memory, in which an individual can remember where another individual hid a cache of food and pilfer it. However, much remains to be learned about these abilities and how they may differ between wolves and dogs.

To shed new light, Vetter and colleagues conducted a study with 9 timber wolves and 8 mongrel dogs living at the Wolf Science Center in Ernsbrunn, Austria. They tested the ability of each animal to find 4, 6, or 8 caches of food, either after seeing a human hiding them or without the animal seeing the hiding.

The researchers found that both dogs and wolves found more of the first 5 food caches more quickly and with less distance travelled if they saw the food being hidden than if they did not see the hiding. This suggests that the animals did not just use scent in order to find the food, and it provides further support for the hypothesis that both kinds of animals are capable of observational spatial memory.

Whether or not they saw the food being hidden, wolves outperformed the dogs in finding the caches. The researchers suggest that this difference in performance may not be due to differing observational spatial memory abilities, but instead arises from differences in other traits, such as persistency and food-related motivation.

The authors add: “While domestication probably affected dogs’ willingness to adjust to humans, the results of the current study collaborate previous findings suggesting that cognitive abilities do not differ very much between dogs and wolves.”

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PLOS ONE
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Organisation/s: University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Austria
Funder: This study was partly supported by the Austrian Science Fund (Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung, FWF), grant number P 33928-B. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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