Birds hold 'funerals' for their dead
I live in the neck of the woods. Where I live, there are deers, turkeys, coyotes, and even foxes. A large turkey herd (a family) appeared in the backyard for a few days. One night, there was a loud, violent struggle (which I did not hear due to my deafness, but everyone else heard it). The next day, we all woke up and found so many torn out feathers and even blood scattered all over the yard. Later in the afternoon, the turkey family returned to the yard. The mother turkey made loud distressing calls and circled around a certain spot (probably where one of her younglings was killed). It was a very sad sight to witness. Yes, of course, animals mourn their dead, too.
But when they spied a dead bird, they started making alarm calls, warning others long distances away.
The jays then gathered around the dead body, forming large cacophonous aggregations. The calls they made, known as “zeeps”, “scolds” and “zeep-scolds”, encouraged new jays to attend to the dead.
The jays also stopped foraging for food, a change in behaviour that lasted for over a day.
When the birds were fooled into thinking a predator had arrived, by being exposed to a mounted owl, they also gathered together and made a series of alarm calls.
They also swooped down at the supposed predator, to scare it off. But the jays never swooped at the body of a dead bird.
The birds also occasionally mobbed the stuffed jays; a behaviour they are known to do in the wild when they attack competitors or sick birds.
The fact that the jays didn’t react to the wooden objects shows that it is not the novelty of a dead bird appearing that triggers the reaction.
The results show that “without witnessing the struggle and manner of death”, the researchers write, the jays see the presence of a dead bird as information to be publicly shared, just as they do the presence of a predator.
Spreading the message that a dead bird is in the area helps safeguard other birds, alerting them to danger, and lowering their risk from whatever killed the original bird in the first place, the researchers say.
Other animals are known to take notice of their dead.
Giraffes and elephants, for example, have been recorded loitering around the body of a recently deceased close relative, raising the idea that animals have a mental concept of death, and may even mourn those that have passed.
(via so-treu)