About: Trap-lining is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2 publications have been published within this topic receiving 22 citations. The topic is also known as: trap line.
TL;DR: Converging methods can help to identify and understand convergence in cognition, behaviour and ecology.
Abstract: Hummingbirds feed from hundreds of flowers every day. The properties of these flowers provide these birds with a wealth of information about colour, space and time to guide how they forage. To understand how hummingbirds might use this information, researchers have adapted established laboratory paradigms for use in the field. In recent years, however, experimental inspiration has come less from other birds, and more from looking at other nectar-feeders, particularly honeybees and bumblebees, which have been models for foraging behaviour and cognition for over a century. In a world in which the cognitive abilities of bees regularly make the news, research on the influence of ecology and sensory systems on bee behaviour is leading to novel insights in hummingbird cognition. As methods designed to study insects in the laboratory are being applied to hummingbirds in the field, converging methods can help us identify and understand convergence in cognition, behaviour and ecology.
TL;DR: Testing whether wild, free-living rufous hummingbirds, Selasphorus rufus, could learn the time and place at which four artificial flower patches were rewarded suggested that the time component of the time–place learning in these birds requires both ordinal and circadian information.