Making Friends, The Vampire Bat Way
Animals, Biology, Ecology, Nature, Psychology Mary Bates Animals, Biology, Ecology, Nature, Psychology Mary Bates

Making Friends, The Vampire Bat Way

Vampire bats aren’t so different from humans in some ways. These long-lived and extremely social bats form close social relationships – bonds that in humans, we’d call friendships. However, vampire bat friendships are characterized by mutual tongue baths and regurgitated blood. Now, research shows how these friendships form. In a study published today, scientists report that vampire bats gradually build trust through social grooming. The results support a model of how cooperative relationships form that could also apply to human friendships.

Read the whole story at National Geographic: How Vampire Bat Friendship is Surprisingly Like Our Own.

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Marine Mammals Actively Explore Environment with Whiskers
Animals, Biology, Ecology, Nature Mary Bates Animals, Biology, Ecology, Nature Mary Bates

Marine Mammals Actively Explore Environment with Whiskers

Whiskers aren’t just decorative. Whisker touch is an active sensory system. Most mammals have whiskers and a few, like rats and shrews, are whisker specialists – actively controlling their whiskers to guide exploration, foraging, and navigation. Pinnipeds (the group that includes seals, sea lions, and walruses) also have highly prominent and sensitive whiskers. Are they as adept at using their whiskers as land-living whisker specialists?

See my latest Animal Minds blog post: Marine Mammals Actively Explore Environment with Whiskers.

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Cross-Modal Object Recognition in Bumble Bees
Animals, Psychology Mary Bates Animals, Psychology Mary Bates

Cross-Modal Object Recognition in Bumble Bees

The ability to experience an object in one sensory modality and later recognize it in another is called cross-modal object recognition. It’s actually a highly complex cognitive capacity thought to be limited to vertebrates. Now, a group of researchers from Queen Mary University of London and Macquarie University in Australia show that bumble bees are capable of performing this task, raising questions of bees’ mental imagery and awareness.

Read my latest post at my Animal Minds blog: Bumble Bees Can Recognize Objects Across Senses.

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Cow Talk
Animals Mary Bates Animals Mary Bates

Cow Talk

According to new research, cows talk to one another, expressing their emotions, both positive and negative, through individualized voices. The researchers say the findings have implications for farmers and animal welfare.

Read more at my Animal Minds blog: How Cows Express Emotions.

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