Tom Cox @cox tom

Almost certainly the best thing I wa ever told about owls was when I met an owl handler and he told me that the wild owls in the sanctuary where he worked worried about the tame show owls there and sometimes stopped by to leave them shrews and mice as presents.

  • TruthAintEasy
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    909 months ago

    Birds are way smarter than we give them credit for. Im possitive that the smarter ones have a rudimentary language, specifically corvids. Owls are so cool, where I live I can go spot great horned owls just hiking around.

    • @atomicorange
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      9 months ago

      Parrots are definitely capable of using human words and phrases in context. Stuff like “bye bye” when someone leaves a room, or “want some water?” when they see you drinking from a glass and want to have a taste. Attaching sounds to concepts and using them to communicate those concepts seems like basic language stuff to me!

      Source: had parrots my whole life. +bird tax

      • @Zirconium
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        149 months ago

        That’s like the first beautiful tamed picture of a parrot I’ve seen. My aunt has a 27 year old parrot so he’s an old fuck and I used to have a friend who’s emotional state was so fucked up that her bird looked like she was on crack. Please more picture of your parrot please

    • @Olmai
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      219 months ago

      Isn’t bird singing a rudimentary language ? They have different songs with different meanings

      • TruthAintEasy
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        439 months ago

        I mean as in they can describe appearances and events to each other, but probably not formulate any plans more complex than eat here, avoid that place, attack guys dressed up in Jason Voorhees costumes because three generations ago a guy dressed like that messed around with our nests… stuff like that

        • Miss Brainfarts
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          299 months ago

          One time I tried to talk to a crow by telling it to caw once for yes, twice for no.

          Grabbed its attention with a friendly greeting, to which it turned and looked at me, waiting for what I’d say, keeping eye-contact and everything.

          I asked it if it actually was a crow, since I wasn’t sure. It cawed once, and patiently waited for me to speak again, looking at me all curious. I said Thank you, and it looked like it nodded.

          Obviously I have no idea if that bird actually understands that crow is what humans call it, but it did feel like I had an actual conversation with it.

          • Herbal Gamer
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            239 months ago

            I can tell you Ravens can learn their name and react to it.

            • TruthAintEasy
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              99 months ago

              We used to have a HUGE raven that would hang around a pet food co I worked at. So I started sneaking him bird seed because idgaf what the boss thinks, Im making a friend here.

              One time the raven made this sound. Almost like the japanese water clock at the end of Kill Bill 1. I reacted like whoa, what a cool sound! And did a little jig. That raven named me ‘waterclock’ and used that sound to greet me whenever he encountered me. I miss Black-Beauty (my name for him)

              • Herbal Gamer
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                39 months ago

                That’s so cool! Merlin would just peck at shoes of tourists to ask for food lol
                I used to carry a bag of nuts in my pocket at work (where he used to visit me) just to get him away from scared people all the time.

            • @angrystego
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              69 months ago

              They can do so much more! They’re super intelligent, if you think a dog is clever (and I’d agree you’re right) then look up the stuff ravens can do!

              • Herbal Gamer
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                79 months ago

                I know; friend of mine nursed an injured raven chick back to health a few years ago and he stayed around for the entire summer :)

                • @angrystego
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                  49 months ago

                  Oh wow, that’s awsome!

        • @ReiRose
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          79 months ago

          That last one was very specific

          • @[email protected]
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            149 months ago

            The last one was an experiment to see what corvids teach to their young and what knowledge is just inborn to them.

      • @angrystego
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        49 months ago

        It definitely depends on the species. Parrots and corvids are the most intelligent groups as far as we know.

    • jimerson
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      99 months ago

      My immediate thought was imagining an owl hopping from boulder to bush, hiking around a forest.

      My second thought was that I’m an idiot.

    • @III
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      79 months ago

      Anecdotal story for you. I worked at a restaurant where our dumpster was across the parking lot. So when we took out trash it was a little walk. One time when taking out the trash, as I opened the door to go outside I heard a bird start chirping. It then flew over the dumpster, and as it passed over about 10 other birds flew out of the dumpster. He was the lookout.

    • @LaunchesKayaks
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      59 months ago

      I have ducks, and they’re way smarter than people think. I have them trained pretty well. They follow some basic commands that make handling them easier. My favorite bird also helps me wrangle any ducks who aren’t listening. I just tell him to help me and he does lol.

    • @Drivebyhaiku
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      29 months ago

      As I understand it Owls sit a little on the derpy side of the bird spectrum. A friend of mine was a vet tech for a sanctuary and appearantly they are divas who get very attached to a single person. She said owls as a rule are very easy to confuse and dupe.

    • Echo Dot
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      9 months ago

      Owls might be interesting birds but they’ve got the brains the size of a grape.

        • Natanael
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          59 months ago

          Number of neurons / brain size in comparison to total body size is a common metric used to predict intelligence. Bigger bodies need more neurons dedicated to control and coordinator muscles and organs.

          Besides the excess neutrons, it helps if the animal frequently have free time and energy available after hunting for food as well as not needing to constantly watch for predators.

          Even then it’s just a vague correlation, not a strong prediction.

      • @angrystego
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        109 months ago

        Bird brains are small in general. Therefore the high intelligence of some species was quite surprising. There’s some fresh research showing that bird neurons are way smaller than mammal neurons - so quite an impressive number of them can be fitted in a small brain. They have a small brain with a big computational power. My pet theory is that this characteristic could have been present already in the dinos, making them smart instead of dull.

        • @nandeEbisu
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          49 months ago

          Sounds like an adaptation to cut weight for flight, like how they have hollow bones too.

      • Johanno
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        9 months ago

        You see your brain is bigger than that of an owl but still you didn’t even look up established fakt about intelligence and rather made a stupid comment that is making the same argument as the nazis did back then.

        • Echo Dot
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          9 months ago

          Eh? The Nazis had opinions on owls?

          I’m just saying they are not smart. The idea of the wise owl is a myth they have the smallest brain to body size of any bird. There’s more going on in the head of a pigeon

          • Johanno
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            49 months ago

            The nazis financed research that should show that white people have bigger brains and therefore are more intelligent.

            • Echo Dot
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              59 months ago

              Yes that’s correct brain size is not a useful measurement to detect intelligence between humans but between different species it’s a good estimate.

              Owls do not have very big brains, and what they have is almost entirely given over to optical and audio processing. This is all very easily verified.