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Category Archive for 'Birds'

Instead of an Attenborough nature show clip this Saturday, here’s another homemade YouTube clip of an excellent mimic:

weewoo the talking starling

People consider starlings pests, but I don’t. The avifauna around here would be poorer for having no enormous roadside flocks of shimmery black beauties swarming in the evening. (See this previous post for an [...]

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Here’s another example of crows doing some problem-solving, this time in Japan:
 

Ornithology – David Attenborough – “Japanese Crow”

 
Corvids are known from other observations and experiments to be smart, so this level of problem-solving wouldn’t seem to be beyond them, but it’s always good to maintain a bit of skepticism. There may be confirmation bias at [...]

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Where I relax

Here’s why I love walking by the riverside on campus:

Common wildlife on the St. Joe. Click to enlarge the preview, or click here for a hi-res version with no captions.

This is on the bank of the St. Joseph River at IPFW, looking west. On the near side is a little parkland with a few [...]

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Waffles’s Birds do Amazing Things

What’s up, compadrés! It’s Waffles here — Butter and I decided to switch things up a bit, and do each other’s regular features this week. I’m going to bring you a wonderful web video about penguins. Well, one in particular:

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We already saw some remarkable courtship displays in the Vogelkop Bowerbird. Here are some more, mainly pheasants:
 

Ornithology – David Attenborough – “Impressing the Females”

 
As in the bowerbirds, these are examples of sexual selection run wild.

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We’ve already seen an instance of tool use in birds with Betty the New Caledonian Crow. Here’s another example of a bird improvising with a nearby object in a successful attempt to get food (the amateur narrator is a little… odd and, as one of the YouTube commentors pointed out, kind of Poohish, but [...]

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You know what I like? Flags. They’re just symbols, of course, and like frackin’ crackers, they aren’t particularly special by themselves, and their maltreatment can breach dams of pent-up emotions and irrationality and make life unpleasant for all involved. But I still like the craft involved in encapsulating a bit of the culture [...]

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Ethological correction

In lamenting the loss of the riverside habitat on campus where the geese used to gather, I think I was wrong about the type of behavioral modification I’ve observed in Whitey and the Honkers. I identified it as operant conditioning, but I think it’s better explained as classical, or Pavlovian, conditioning. They’ve simply learned [...]

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Last week I mentioned briefly the European starling’s ability to mimic. But among mimics, the Superb lyrebird (Menura novaehollandiae) of Australia, named for its tail, reigns supreme when it comes to detail and precision. In this clip, David Attenborough spies on one in his display area in the woods, and as usual, provides just enough [...]

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Waffles believes LOLcats can contain philosophical lessons, and I agree. This one illustrates the general crappiness of how our universe is set up, and it might make you cry, so I put it below the fold. Warning: Adult NOMing ahead:

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