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 Betreff des Beitrags: Animals prefer working for tidbits, degus too
BeitragVerfasst: 06.01.2013, 18:19 
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Registriert: 02.05.2007, 20:50
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Animals prefer to work for food instead of getting it for free:
http://furfeatherworks.com/training-tid ... eeloading/

I'd like to point out the theories trying to explain this phenomena:

Zitat:
Studies suggest that animals display this same behavior phenomenon too, and there are a few theories on why:

1) the studies in which this phenomenon was demonstrated were flawed; the food received for performing a behavior was different than the food offered for “free,” thus corrupting the results. In my opinion, this may have been the case in some of the studies, but I’ve personally seen this phenomenon over and over in working with animals, so there has to be something more going on here.
2) “working” for food provides additional information to the animal about how to attain that food once the “free” food source runs out; thus it makes ethological sense to instinctively work for food that the animal could earn for free in the immediate future, but may become difficult to attain as time goes on.

3) it’s fun. If it were possible to take a poll of zoo animals, pets, and other captive animals, I’d wager a bet that most of them suffer from chronic understimulation. They will find a chance to use that powerful brain wherever they can.

4) It gives animals an outlet for natural behaviors that they wouldn’t otherwise be able to perform in captivity. It makes sense; any pet owner will tell you that dogs appear to love to scent, chase, and chew; parrots love to forage, chickens love to peck, rats love to explore, cats love to hunt, horses love to graze. If they were given the choice between eating out of a bowl or performing an instinctive “job” to attain food, perhaps the additional intrinsic reinforcement of performing natural behaviors offers enough additional reinforcement to outweigh the lure of free nourishment.

Source: http://furfeatherworks.com/training-tid ... eeloading/


And what is the moral of this story?

Zitat:
[...] it is OKAY, even BENEFICIAL, to make your pet work for his or her food!


Well nothing new for us, but I think especially for degus it is crucial to point out the importance of searching food / foraging. In wild it makes up to 46 % of daily activities according to Ebensperger and Walem (2005). Another 32% they spend on vigilance, 8 % doing nothing, 7 % locomotion / moving around, 3 % selfgrooming, 3 % mutual grooming, 1 % dust bathing, 0,2 % digging burrows.

References

Ebensperger, L.A. Hurtado, M.J. 2005. Seasonal changes in the time butget of degus, Octodon degus. Behaviour 142: 91-112.

See also:
http://deguworld.proboards.com/index.cg ... hread=9704
http://www.degus-international.org/foru ... =28&t=1195


Abstract in German / Kurzübersetzung:
Der hier vorgestellte Link geht darauf ein, dass Tiere lieber für Essen arbeiten als es umsonst zu bekommen. Das kann auch bei Degus beobachtet werden. Im folgenden werden zudem die Aktivitäten von wildlebenden Degus vorgestellt.

_________________
Degupedia 2.0: Videos (Youtube) | Dokumente (Issuu) | Degupedia International (Google+)

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