# Food hoarders and non-hoarders in Paridae – a cognition perspective

**Authors:** Anders Brodin

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10071-025-01998-3 · 2025-08-13

## TL;DR

This paper explores the different winter survival strategies and cognitive abilities of hoarding and non-hoarding parid birds.

## Contribution

It highlights a cognitive trade-off between spatial memory in hoarders and innovation in non-hoarders within the Paridae family.

## Key findings

- Hoarder parids have larger hippocampi and excel in spatial memory.
- Non-hoarding parids like great tits are innovative foragers in human-modified habitats.
- Chickadees in North America show similar problem-solving skills to European great tits.

## Abstract

Parids are well-known birds both in Europe and North America. Despite being arboreal foragers of similar size, there is a striking dichotomy in the wintering strategies in the family. Most species are food hoarding specialists that store large amounts of winter food in autumn. A small stable group will then defend a large winter territory in which they store food. From a cognition perspective these species are spatial memory specialists with the volume of the hippocampus, a brain structure that is important for spatial memorization, correlating to the degree of specialisation for food hoarding. The wintering strategy in non-hoarding parids, the Eurasian great and blue tits, and species that are closely related to these, is very different. They are generalist foragers that have adapted especially well to anthropogenic habitats such as gardens and city parks. The great tit stands out as being especially innovative and good at observational learning, deserving its reputation as being “smartest among tits”. As the great and blue tits do not occur in North America it is possible that some chickadee populations have adapted to anthropogenic habitats as opposed to their Eurasian close relatives. The black-capped chickadee, for example, has been observed mastering foraging techniques that only the great tit does in Europe. In conclusion, there is a trade-off between two cognitive specialisations in the family with hoarding parids being spatial memory specialists and non-hoarding innovative problem solvers. The starkness of this dichotomy probably depends on that the selection for optimal foraging in winter is especially strong in small birds.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Paridae (taxon 9153)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Parus major (Great Tit, species) [taxon 9157], Cyanistes caeruleus (Blaumeise, species) [taxon 156563], Poecile atricapillus (Black-capped chickadee, species) [taxon 48891]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350420/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350420