Journal article

Behavioral Lateralization and Optimal Route Choice in Flying Budgerigars

PS Bhagavatula, C Claudianos, MR Ibbotson, MV Srinivasan

Plos Computational Biology | Published : 2014

Abstract

Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take them through the environment safely and quickly. We have investigated some of the strategies by which they achieve this. We trained budgerigars to fly through a tunnel in which they encountered a barrier that offered two passages, positioned side by side, at the halfway point. When one of the passages was substantially wider than the other, the birds tended to fly through the wider passage to continue their transit to the end of the tunnel, regardless of whether this passage was on the right or the left. Evidently, the birds were selecting the safest and quickest route. However, when the two pass..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by an ARC Centre of Excellence in Vision Science (Grant CE0561903), ARC Discovery Grant DP 110103277, and by a Queensland Smart State Premier's Fellowship. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript