Wolves can learn from observing humans and pack members where food is
hidden and recognize when humans only pretend to hide food, reports a
study for the first time in the open-access journal Frontiers in Psychology.
These findings imply that when our ancestors started to domesticate
dogs, they could have built on a pre-existing ability of wolves to learn
from others, not necessarily pack members.
In a recent study, Friederike Range and Zsófia Virányi from the Messerli
Research Institute at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna
investigated if wolves and dogs can observe a familiar "demonstrator" --
a human or a specially trained dog -- to learn where to look for food
within a meadow. The subjects were 11 North American grey wolves and 14
mutts, all between 5 and 7 months old, born in captivity, bottle-fed,
and hand-raised in packs at the Wolf Science Center of Game Park
Ernstbrunn, Austria.
The wolves and dogs were two to four times more likely to find the snack
after watching a human or dog demonstrator hide it, and this implies
that they had learnt from the demonstration instead of only relying on
their sense of smell. Moreover, they rarely looked for the food when the
human demonstrator had only pretended to hide it, and this proves that
they had watched very carefully.
The wolves were less likely to follow dog demonstrators to hidden food.
This does not necessarily mean that they were not paying attention to
dog demonstrators: on the contrary, the wolves may have been perceptive
enough to notice that the demonstrator dogs did not find the food reward
particularly tasty themselves, and so simply did not bother to look for
it.
The researchers conclude that the ability to learn from other species,
including humans, is not unique to dogs but was already present in their
wolf ancestors. Prehistoric humans and the ancestors of dogs could
build on this ability to better coordinate their actions.
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