Hot Figure Toys 11" Japan Anime Sexy Doll Keumaya Final Hyper Nurse Commander Erika Naked PVC Sailo

Showing posts with label Parrot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parrot. Show all posts

Who’s a hungry boy then? Flock of parrots waste no time finishing an unattended chocolate milkshake

By SARA MALM
Sweet treat: The company of parrots descended on a cafe table where a chocolate milkshake had been left unattended Sharing was not part of the agenda for this colourful parrot as it claimed ownership of a tasty milkshake. The lorikeet and its company descended on a café in Queensland, Australia where the chocolate drink had been left unattended for a few seconds too long. Although the parrot tried its best to fight off fellow milkshake fans, it was forced to relent when a whole flock of birds joined in for a sip.
My milkshake! Only the bravest of parrots would dare come between this lorikeet and its drink as the colourful company fought over the chocolate treat The shake thieves were caught in the act by British holidaymaker Keith Doxsey who had bought the drink for his nephew. The colourful group of rainbow lorikeets seized the opportunity after the shake was left on its own for just a minute and a handful of parrots soon turned into a company of 30.
Sharing is caring: The lorikeets tuck in to the milkshake at a cafe in Queensland, Australia Less than ten minutes later, the lorikeets had finished off the milkshake. Keith Doxsey was visiting The Polish Cafe in Queensland, Australia with his wife Katrina when the parrots attacked his nephew's treat. He said: ‘The birds just appeared out of nowhere not more than 60 seconds after my nephew had put the drink down.'
Chocolate shake shared: The parrots looking pleased after they have polished off the drink source: dailymail

Who's a clever boy then? How parrots can solve problems that defeated monkeys and dogs

By FIONA MACRAE

Problem solving parrot: The birds did as well as three-year-old children in the tests

It's been assumed up to now that parrots are only capable of learning, er, parrot fashion. But it seems these birds are far smarter than we thought.
In a test that puzzled monkeys and defeated dogs, parrots have passed with flying colours.
Indeed, so tricky were the mental processes involved, that only great apes and, of course, humans, have succeeded before.
The test was taken by three male and three female African greys from a rescue centre. Pieces of walnut were hidden inside one of two opaque containers.

One or both was then shaken and the birds, which are used to the idea of the containers holding treats, used their beak to upend the one with the hidden walnut 70 to 80 per cent of the time.
This suggests they were able to link the rattling of the walnut pieces with the presence of food.
And perhaps, more importantly, when just the empty container was shaken, to realise the lack of noise meant the treat must be in the other tube.
The University of Vienna team which carried out the research said the results were remarkable, adding that the parrots did as well as three-year-old children.
Researcher Dr Christian Schloegl told the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: ‘Such behaviour has so far been shown only in great apes but not in any other non-human animal.’

source: dailymail

Why right-footed parrots are the odd ones out in bird kingdom

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Best foot forward: Research has found that parrots favour their left side


Not only can parrots talk, it appears they share another human trait – they are also right or left-handed, or in their case footed.

And the majority of them favour their left side.
Researchers studied 320 parrots from 16 Australian species to see which eye they used to view potential foods.

They found that roughly 47 per cent were left handed, 33 per cent right handed, and the remainder ambidextrous.

In addition, in some cases young birds appeared to experiment with both sides before finally settling on one.

Dr Calum Brown, from Macquarie University, Sydney, who led the study, said: ‘Basically, you get this very close relationship with the eye that they use to view the object and then the hand that they use to grasp it, and it’s very consistent across all the species except a couple.

‘In some species, they’re so strongly right or left handed at the species level that there’s effectively no variation.

'With sulphur-crested cockatoos - every single individual we've seen is left-handed. But when you see the juveniles which have just fledged, they're experimenting with both hands, all the time.

'They eventually settle on using their left hands.'

The idea of handedness in humans is tied to the use of one hemisphere of the brain over another, known as 'lateralisation'. In the case of the parrots, this appeared to be an advantage regardless of whether the left or the right side dominated.

'"It's quite obvious that in terms of direct foraging, as well as more complicated problem-solving situations, that if you're very strongly lateralised, irrespective of whether you're right or left handed, you tend to be better at this sort of task.'

Dr Brown added that lateralisation allowed much more efficiency, the way a computer with two processors can do two things simultaneously and effectively multi-task.

'We think that's possibly what's going on with parrots,' he said.
The study is published in Biological Letters.

source: dailymail

He squawked! Lorenzo the lookout parrot becomes a jailbird after he's arrested for warning drug cartel that police were on the way

By DAVID GARDNER

Behind bars: Lorenzo the lookout parrot, who was tried to say: 'Run, run, the cat is going to get you!' every time police came near a drug cartel's hideout


Lorenzo the parrot is facing life behind bars in Colombia after being caught squawking on the police for a drug cartel.

Every time a police officer came close to the traffickers’ headquarters, the bird was trained to scream in Spanish: ‘Run, run, the cat is going to get you!’

Police trying to shut down gangs behind the lucrative drug route to the U.S. couldn’t work out at first how they launched raids only to find that the birds had flown the coop


I know why the caged bird sings: Lorenzo is now facing a life behind bars... but fortunately he is already used to that


But detectives finally got wise to the parrot. They sneaked past the loud-beaked lookout to find a hidden stash of weapons and marijuana at a safe house in Barranquilla.

Police also found two more specially-trained parrots.

‘We found a very interesting situation when we confiscated some exotic birds,’ said one Columbian police officer.

'Among them we have a parrot that alerted the people by saying run, run so they would run away before we could arrive.’

Animal officials said police had handed over as many as 1,000 parrots, many from the same coastal region, that had been taught to act as lookouts.

Baranquilla is Columbia's fourth largest city after the capital Bogota, Medellin and Cali as well as the most populated city on the country's Atlantic coast.



source: dailymail