Precise cache detection by olfaction in a scatter-hoarder bird Molina Morales, Mercedes Castro GutiƩrrez, Jorge Albaladejo, Gonzalo Parejo, Deseada Corvid Odour Pica pica This study was supported by the project (SERAVI- CGL 2014-52308-P) of the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad from the Spanish Government, by Juan de la Cierva-Formacion Fellowship (FJCI-2015-26257) and by the Government of Extremadura through the contract TA13002 to D.P. We thank Anthony McGregor and two anonymous referees for their comments and suggestions on the manuscript. The sense of olfaction has been traditionally considered of low relevance in bird biology. In particular, the location of cached seeds by scatter-hoarder corvids is assumed to depend on spatial memory, whereas no study has demonstrated the use of olfaction to detect these seeds. In this study we tested whether olfaction might play a role in the precise location of cached nuts by magpies, Pica pica, a scatter-hoarder corvid species. We conducted an experiment under natural conditions where nuts belonging to four treatments were buried, simulating natural caches, and we monitored the rate of nut detection by magpies. Three of the treatments included nuts with natural odour or odour of a strong-smelling sub- stance (untreated nuts, nutshells filled with soil and nuts soaked in diesel), whereas the fourth treatment consisted of 3D-printed fake nuts made of polypropylene. The experiment was replicated in two sites and in several breeding territories, using a total of 624 nuts. Motion-activated cameras were installed to identify the animals foraging in the plots. The results show that magpies detected untreated nuts, nutshells or nuts soaked in diesel ca. three times more than 3D-printed fake nuts. Among detected and unburied nuts, the 3D-printed nuts were largely abandoned on site, followed by nutshells without a kernel, natural nuts and nuts soaked in diesel. All this strongly supports the hypothesis that magpies use olfaction to pinpoint cached nuts, either for nut recovery or pilfering, but once a nut is detected they may use other senses such as vision or touch for selection. Given the strong changes in landscape features that may occur under natural conditions between the time of nut caching and nut retrieval, we suggest that the use of olfaction might be crucial to help spatial memory in determining the location of cached nuts in corvids. 2026-01-07T11:50:45Z 2026-01-07T11:50:45Z 2020-08-04 journal article Molina-Morales, M., Castro, J., Albaladejo, G., & Parejo, D. (2020). Precise cache detection by olfaction in a scatter-hoarder bird. Animal behaviour, 167, 185-191. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2020.07.002 0003-3472 1095-8282 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/109251 10.1016/j.anbehav.2020.07.002 eng embargoed access Elsevier