Copycat' Bearded Dragons Mimic Their Peers

By Laura Geggel, Staff Writer Yahoo News, October 9, 2014

Bearded dragons are the first known reptiles that can imitate each other, a
study finds.

The scaly bearded dragon is the first reptile to show it can imitate a peer,
and all for the price of a mealworm, new research suggests.

In a new study, researchers trained a 3-year-old female bearded dragon
(Pogona vitticeps) how to open a sliding screen door with her head. Once
successful, the lizard entered the doorway and ate a mealworm prize. Other
bearded dragons then watched a video of the lizard opening the door, and
scientists monitored whether the other animals imitated the behavior.

All eight bearded dragons that watched the 11-second video of the
demonstrator lizard followed suit. They opened the door in exactly the same
manner as the bearded dragon in the video did, the researchers said. In
contrast, the four lizards that did not see the video failed to open the
door. [The 5 Smartest Non-Primates on the Planet]

"The ability to learn through imitation is thought to be the pinnacle of
social learning and long considered a distinctive characteristic of humans,"
lead researcher Anna Wilkinson, a senior lecturer of animal cognition at the
University of Lincoln, in the United Kingdom, said in a statement. "However,
nothing is known about these abilities in reptiles."

It's unlikely that the successful lizards were showing spontaneous behavior,
as they all opened the door in the same way as shown in the video, Wilkinson
said. Their behavior suggests that they were imitating the demonstrator
lizard to get to the mealworms.

"This research suggests that the bearded dragon is capable of social
learning that cannot be explained by simple mechanisms — such as an
individual being drawn to a certain location because they observed another
in that location or through observational learning," Wilkinson said. "The
finding is not compatible with the claim that only humans — and to a lesser
extent, great apes — are able to imitate."

Bearded dragons are the first known reptiles that can imitate each other, a
study finds.
Scientists previously thought only humans and advanced primates, such as
chimpanzees, could imitate one another. True imitation is a complex
behavior; it requires that an animal copy the behavior of another and
understand the meaning behind it. This is different from emulation, in which
an animal copies a behavior without understanding its implications. For
instance, a parrot might repeat a phrase, but not realize what it's saying.

Recent research, however, shows that imitation may be more common that
previously thought. Apes, such as wild chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans,
imitate each other, as can monkeys, including wild marmosets and rhesus
macaques. Birds, such as pigeons and zebra finches, and other mammals have
also joined the club. Mimicking mammals include dogs, bottlenose dolphins
and the banded mongoose.

This isn't Wilkinson's first foray into the world of reptile cognition.
Earlier this year, she and her colleagues showed that turtles could learn
how to use a touch-screen computer.

Reptiles and mammals share a common ancestor, and understanding the
behavioral similarities and differences between the two groups of animals
may help researchers tease apart the evolution of cognition, Wilkinson said.
It's likely that the ability to imitate is based on ancient mechanisms, she
added.

"These results reveal the first evidence of imitation in a reptile species
and suggest that reptiles can use social information to learn through
imitation," she said.

The study was published online Sept. 9 in the journal Animal Cognition.

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