Scientific Reports (Apr 2022)

Sleep loss impairs cognitive performance and alters song output in Australian magpies

  • Robin D. Johnsson,
  • Farley Connelly,
  • Juliane Gaviraghi Mussoi,
  • Alexei L. Vyssotski,
  • Kristal E. Cain,
  • Timothy C. Roth,
  • John A. Lesku

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-10162-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Sleep maintains optimal brain functioning to facilitate behavioural flexibility while awake. Owing to a historical bias towards research on mammals, we know comparatively little about the role of sleep in facilitating the cognitive abilities of birds. We investigated how sleep deprivation over the full-night (12 h) or half-night (6 h) affects cognitive performance in adult Australian magpies (Cracticus tibicen), relative to that after a night of undisturbed sleep. Each condition was preceded and followed by a baseline and recovery night of sleep, respectively. Prior to each treatment, birds were trained on an associative learning task; on the day after experimental treatment (recovery day), birds were tested on a reversal learning task. To glean whether sleep loss affected song output, we also conducted impromptu song recordings for three days. Ultimately, sleep-deprived magpies were slower to attempt the reversal learning task, less likely to perform and complete the task, and those that did the test performed worse than better-rested birds. We also found that sleep-deprived magpies sang longer yet fewer songs, shifted crepuscular singing to mid-day, and during the post-recovery day, song frequency bandwidth narrowed. These results collectively indicate that sleep loss impairs motivation and cognitive performance, and alters song output, in a social adult songbird.