Cuttlefish could be the first animals shown to learn
visually before birth or hatching, researchers say.
Cuttlefish embryos that develop in their translucent eggs with
crabs nearby hatch into youngsters with a distinct preference for eating crabs,
says Ludovic Dickel of the University
of Caen in France. Without that pre-hatch view
of crabs, the little cuttlefish attack shrimp in preference to crabs, he and
his colleagues report in the July Animal
Behaviour.
The preference develops from sight alone, Dickel says. The
researchers kept the crabs in containers that prevented crab scents from getting
into the water with the eggs.
Earlier work by the cuttlefish team showed that within a few
hours of hatching, the babies need only one good look at crabs to develop a
preference for them. Now the window of learning seems to be open even before
hatching, Dickel says.
Other research teams have demonstrated that embryos start
learning scents and sounds, Dickel says. Laughing gull chicks respond readily
to parental crooning if they heard the sound repeatedly while still in the egg;
and ants base their sense of who's a nestmate on smells they experienced as
larvae.
Cuttlefish offered a chance to test for visual learning
because of their remarkable embryo eyes and the translucence of the egg
coverings. When the mother lays the eggs, the view is obscured by the black
cuttlefish ink. As the eggs approach the time of hatching, they swell to the
point where the embryos can see through the translucent outer covering.
This test provides the first demonstration in any animal
that embryos can learn the sights around them, says Dickel.
“In the world in general, I think visual learning in embryos
is surprising and cool,” said Karen Warkentin of Boston University,
when she heard about the work. She studies defense reactions of frog embryos.
“To me,” she added, “I don’t think it is so surprising — in that I’m used to
frog embryos being able to do more than most people expect.”
Found in: Life and Zoology