Vagrant, non-breeding common ravens, Corvus corax, inhabiting the fore
sted mountains of Maine are specialized to feed on rich but ephemeral
carcasses of large mammals during the harsh winter months. The foragin
g and roosting behaviour of free-ranging ravens were studied during th
e winters of 1988-1990. Ravens quickly assembled at carcasses, and int
o communal roosts. Six lines of evidence indicate that these roosts fu
nction as information centres. (1) Roosts comprised both knowledgeable
and naive foragers. (2) Departures from roosts were highly synchroniz
ed, with most members departing in one direction. (3) Direction of dep
arture often changed from day to day. (4) Birds made naive of food sou
rces (by being withheld from the wild and then allowed to join roosts)
followed roost-mates to new feeding sites, whereas control birds held
and released outside of roosts rarely found the local food bonanzas.
(5) Birds made knowledgeable of food sources (by being released at new
carcasses) joined roosts and led roost-mates to the food on three of
20 occasions. (6) The same individuals switched leader and follower ro
les depending upon their knowledge of feeding opportunities. Although
ravens may form roosts at traditional areas (near stable food sources)
that are used for many years, the ravens in Maine frequently shifted
roost sites to be near newly discovered carcasses. Information exchang
e at roosts principally occurred on the night of, or the night before,
the roost shift. Social soaring displays assembled birds from a wide
area and were associated with mass movements to new roosts formed at n
earby food. (C) 1996 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour