Guarding Most species are particularly wary of onlooking individuals during caching and ensure that the cache locations are
secret. Not all caches are concealed however, for example
shrikes store prey items on thorns on branches in the open.
Shared or individual hoarding Although a small handful of species share food stores, food hoarding is a solo endeavor for most species, including almost all rodents and birds. For example, a number of jays live in large family groups, but they don't demonstrate sharing of cached food. Rather, they hoard their food supply selfishly, caching and retrieving the supply in secret. There are only two species in which kin selection has resulted in a shared food store, i.e.
beavers (
Castor canadensis) and
acorn woodpeckers (
Melanerpes formicivorous); the former live in family groups and construct winter larders of submerged branches, while the latter are unusual in that they construct a conspicuous communal larder.
Wolves,
foxes, and
coyotes identify their food caches by
scent-marking them,
Pilfering Pilferage occurs when one animal takes food from another animal's larder. Some species experience high levels of cache pilferage, up to 30% of the supply per day. Models of scatter hoarding suggested the value of cached food is equal to the hoarder's ability to retrieve it.
Reciprocal pilfering It has been observed that members of certain species, such as
rodents and
chickadees, act as both hoarder and pilferer. In other words, pilfering can be reciprocal and, thus, tolerable. These results, and those from other studies, demonstrate the dynamic nature of the food supplies of scatter hoarding animals.
Deception Group-foraging
common ravens, (
Corvus corax), scatter hoard their food and also raid the caches made by others. Cachers withdraw from
conspecifics when hiding their food and most often place their caches behind structures, obstructing the view of potential observers. Raiders watch inconspicuously and keep at a distance to cachers close to their cache sites. In response to the presence of potential raiders or because of their initial movements towards caches, the cachers frequently interrupt caching, change cache sites, or recover their food items. These behaviors suggest that ravens are capable of withholding information about their intentions, which may qualify as
tactical deception. Similarly,
Eurasian jays (
Garrulus glandarius) when being watched by another jay, prefer to cache food behind an opaque barrier rather than a transparent barrier, suggesting they may opt to cache in out-of-view locations to reduce the likelihood of other jays pilfering their caches. ==See also==