Nest-site selection, an ecologically relevant behavior, was studied in the golden hamster in a model environment where the animals could choose between nestboxes differing in distance from resource or in structural features (size and illumination). Experiment 1 showed that hamsters can decrease foraging costs by setting their nests in the nestbox nearest to the food and/or nestmaterial sources, and that hoarding costs, as distinct from simple procurement costs, are taken into account in the choice process. Preferences for darker and larger nestboxes were obtained in Experiment 2. Experiment 3 revealed an internally coherent hierarchical pattern in preferences, with illumination being more important than size and resource distance, and size more important than resource distance. The results suggest that nest-site selection and foraging behaviors are parts of an integrated causal system. © 1991 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Ottoni, E. B., & Ades, C. (1991). Resource location and structural properties of the nestbox as determinants of nest-site selection in the golden hamster. Animal Learning & Behavior, 19(3), 234–240. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197881
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