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Antarctic skuas recognize individual humans
Authors:Won Young Lee  Yeong-Deok Han  Sang-im Lee  Piotr G Jablonski  Jin-Woo Jung  Jeong-Hoon Kim
Institution:1.Division of Polar Life Sciences,Korea Polar Research Institute,Incheon,Republic of Korea;2.Department of Biological Sciences, College of Natural Sciences,Inha University,Incheon,Republic of Korea;3.Laboratory of Behavioral Ecology and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, College of Natural Sciences,Seoul National University,Seoul,Republic of Korea;4.Institute of Advanced Machinery and Design,Seoul National University,Seoul,Republic of Korea;5.Museum and Institute of Zoology,Polish Academy of Sciences,Warsaw,Poland;6.Department of Biological Sciences,Kongju National University,Gongju,Republic of Korea
Abstract:Recent findings report that wild animals can recognize individual humans. To explain how the animals distinguish humans, two hypotheses are proposed. The high cognitive abilities hypothesis implies that pre-existing high intelligence enabled animals to acquire such abilities. The pre-exposure to stimuli hypothesis suggests that frequent encounters with humans promote the acquisition of discriminatory abilities in these species. Here, we examine individual human recognition abilities in a wild Antarctic species, the brown skua (Stercorarius antarcticus), which lives away from typical human settlements and was only recently exposed to humans due to activities at Antarctic stations. We found that, as nest visits were repeated, the skua parents responded at further distances and were more likely to attack the nest intruder. Also, we demonstrated that seven out of seven breeding pairs of skuas selectively responded to a human nest intruder with aggression and ignored a neutral human who had not previously approached the nest. The results indicate that Antarctic skuas, a species that typically inhabited in human-free areas, are able to recognize individual humans who disturbed their nests. Our findings generally support the high cognitive abilities hypothesis, but this ability can be acquired during a relatively short period in the life of an individual as a result of interactions between individual birds and humans.
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