• @HaggunenonsOPM
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    41 year ago

    How interesting! That does seem like the same sort of thing. I imagine that not all of these cats that are scared of cucumbers have actually seen snakes before, so it’s likely that it is hardwired in them. Just like how in the article they got some response from the warblers that hadn’t been around cowbirds for 6,000 years, but then no response for the 300,000 year ones. It’s so crazy that something could be passed through so many generations like that. I wonder how many generations cucumber cat fear can be passed. That’s a really cool connection, Thank You!

      • @HaggunenonsOPM
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        21 year ago

        It’s very interesting that not only were the crows still mobbing the dangerous masks 5 years after capture, but they were mobbing the masks more and more as time went on.

        It seems like the crows needed to either witness a capture or a mobbing event involving the mask in order to learn to themselves react to the mask. Am I understanding this correctly, or do you see somewhere that it says they were able to learn without having directly witnessed the dangerous mask?

        • livus
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          fedilink
          21 year ago

          @Haggunenons I think they did have to witness someone else scolding the mask. I initially read this and misunderstood how the horizontal transmisdion works.

          • @HaggunenonsOPM
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            21 year ago

            Ah, I see. The book they mention in that article, Gifts of the Crow, looks good. I’m adding it to my list.

            • livus
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              fedilink
              11 year ago

              @Haggunenons yes it does! I really wish we had crows in my country. I would definitely be trying to do gift exchanges with them.