Der Erfindergeist der Tiere
Es el primer libro de la bióloga cognitiva Alice Auersperg, acerca de la capacidad inventiva de otras especies. Desde las abejas hasta, como no, las cacatúas de Tanimbar.
Recomendado para aquellos que sepáis alemán
brandstaetterverlag.com/buch…
Came back briefly to share this amazing opportunity at my lab!
ALT PhD position in parrot tool use
Job offer: applications opening 19th of February 2025.
We are looking for a PhD student (funded by the Austrian Science Fund, FWF) for a doctoral project in the field of animal behaviour and cognition
Project Title:
Dexterity in the tool use of the Goffin’s cockatoo
https://www.fwf.ac.at/forschungsradar/10.55776/PAT2728324
Project Location:
The Messerli Research Institute is located at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna. Its division on Comparative Cognition investigates cognitive abilities in both the social and physical domain of various, free-living as well as domesticated, animal species including Goffin’s cockatoos, keas, dogs, goats and pigs.
https://www.vetmeduni.ac.at/en/messerli
This PhD project will be conducted at the Goffin Lab in Lower Austria.
https://www.vetmeduni.ac.at/cognition/goffin-lab
Academic Supervision:
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Alice Auersperg (University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna)
Project Description:
ALT The Goffin’s cockatoo uses and builds tool -based technologies rivalling higher primates, both in captivity as well as in the wild. While we already understand a lot about what kinds of tools animals use in which context, we still know very little about the innovative process and fine-scaled mechanisms underlying such behaviour: how are the cockatoos able to innovate tool use in the first place?
Thereby, it is important to consider behavioural as well as physical barriers that animals face when using tools. We currently predict that tool use techniques are strongly affected by the different properties of the tasks the birds are operating their tools upon. This PhD project aims to test to what extent the tool use techniques invented by aviary cockatoos in Austria manifest in a predictable manner based on specific tool and task properties. To achieve this, we plan to blend behavioural analysis and material physics. The findings of this project will help to understand the onset and mecha
Are humans the only species that communicates when a collaborator is missing information?
@TownrowLuke and I show that our closest relatives, bonobos, can track when a partner is knowledgeable or ignorant, and tailor communication accordingly @PNASNewspnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.24…
ALT Bonobo, Nyota, at Ape Initiative, a science and education nonprofit
Jane Goodall speaks about our findings on the self-medication behavior of wild orangutan Rakus that applied a biologically active plant to a wound and about her fascinating observations in the Gombe chimps 🐵🩷. @JGIAustria @JaneGoodallInst @JaneGoodallUK
A pharmacy student of Biruni University, Istanbul, had read about the behavior of Rakus and then took the opportunity to ask Jane about it. I was so happy when I saw the video and very grateful to her for sharing it with me.
So happy to see another paper on self-medication behavior in our closest relatives published by Elodie Freymann and colleagues! Thanks @ScienceMagazine for including me in the news article ❤️! There is still so much to discover…science.org/content/article/…
An orangutan in Sumatra surprised scientists when he was seen treating an open wound on his cheek with a poultice made from a medicinal plant go.nature.com/4dot7a8
Scientists have observed an orangutan treating a wound on its face with a medicinal plant, a world's first.
Portia Gabor spoke to Dr @IsabelleLaumer, a cognitive biologist at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour on the research.
#3NewsGH
Scientists have observed an orangutan treating a wound on its face with a medicinal plant, a world's first.
I spoke to Dr Isabelle Laumer, a cognitive biologist at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour on the research.
An orangutan in Sumatra surprised scientists when he was seen treating an open wound on his cheek with a poultice made from a medicinal plant go.nature.com/3UrXtjk
ALT The images show the stages of succesful wound healing after a wild male Sumatran orangutan intentionally treated his open facial wound with a medicinal plant.
Picture credit: Armas Safruddin; Ulil Azhari Adami