Spatial learning and discrimination of food patches in the European badger (Meles meles L.)

Abstract Theories of foraging often assume that concentrations of prey (‘patches’) can be discriminated by a forager, but there have been few studies of how this is achieved when patches are not recognizable by means of an obvious proximal cue. We observed the search trajectories of two badgers ( Meles meles L.) foraging for peanuts in artificial patches to see how efficiently they could map a new patch in the first place, and whether they would remember the location and extent of a previously visited patch. The results suggest that when a patch is encountered for the first time, a strategy of area-restricted searching keeps the animal's trajectory largely within the patch boundary. After a single exposure to a novel patch, however, badgers show evidence of being able to remember its location and extent, apparently with reference to distal landmarks.