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Kangaroos communicate with people

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Kangaroos communicate with people

Kangaroos are the first wild animals to exhibit interspecies communication, say researchers That kind of behaviour is more commonly seen in animal

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Kangaroos are the first wild animals to exhibit interspecies communication, say researchers

That kind of behaviour is more commonly seen in animals that have evolved alongside humans

The New York Times runs a story on the behaviour kangaroos show when they have humans as a last resource. Yan Zhuang, wrote the story for The New York Times and Gto News brings you that information

When they’re hungry, they’ll let you know by coming up to you and looking beseechingly at you and the container of food. If that doesn’t work, they’ll sniff and paw at your leg.

No, we’re not talking about dogs. We’re talking about kangaroos.

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Just like dogs

Researchers at the University of Roehampton in Britain and the University of Sydney in Australia say that such behavior led them to a startling discovery: kangaroos can communicate with humans similar to the way dogs, horses and goats do despite never having been domesticated, says the story by The New York Times.

Kangaroos are the first wild animal to exhibit a behavior that is more commonly seen in domesticated species, communicating requests for help from a human, the researchers said. Up until now, researchers had hypothesized that this kind of interspecies communication had existed only in animals that had evolved alongside humans.

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The marsupials have intercated with humans for a long time now

More intelligent

The study suggests a higher level of intelligence in the Australian marsupials than had been assumed.

The researchers said they hoped the results would persuade people — especially Australians — to treat kangaroos with more care. Although, they’re also seen as a nuisance and are culled annually because of their overabundance.

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Not well accepted

Farmers complain that kangaroos eat pastures meant for livestock, while researchers worry they are a threat to endangered wildlife by destroying habitat and eating reptiles.

“I think if the broader public has a greater understanding of the cognitive abilities of an animal, it’s easier to sell the idea that we should treat them with the best possible care”, said Alan McElligott, the lead author of the paper.

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Rescued kangaroos are cared for in shelters

They look for help

The researchers trained and tested 11 kangaroos from Australian zoos over eight days last year to get food out of a box. Then they locked the box, making it impossible for them to gain access to the food without help.

Initially, the kangaroos sniffed and scratched at the box. But once they realized they couldn’t open it, they turned their attention to Dr. McElligott, who was in the enclosure with them.

“The kangaroos looked up at me and they did this sort of gaze alternation — looking at the box, back at me, back at the box, back at me,” said Dr. McElligott, who formerly worked at the University of Roehampton and is now an associate professor at the City University of Hong Kong.

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Almost like a puppy

“A few of the kangaroos approached me and started sniffing my knee and scratching my knee,” he added. “If it was a dog you’d call it pawing.”

Ten of the 11 kangaroos involved in the study actively looked at Dr. McElligott, and nine alternated between looking at him and the box containing the food.

“They were really trying to intentionally communicate their desire to get him to help get the food out of the box,” said Alexandra Green, an animal behavior and welfare researcher at the University of Sydney, who is the paper’s co-author.

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Kangaroos can be really aggresive

An adapted form of communication

Dr. Green says she believes that the kangaroo’s behavior is a modification of how they communicate with one another in the wild.

“They’re a social species and would use these cues among each other,” she said. “In a captive setting, where there’s humans present, they’re probably able to adapt this ability to communicate with humans.”

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Not the wolves

The kangaroos used in the study weren’t fully wild, since that would have been dangerous to the researchers. They had been raised in zoos and were familiar with humans, but were still considered undomesticated, reports The New York Times in its story.

Dr. McElligott said that in a similar study done with wolves, another undomesticated animal, the wolves simply attacked the food boxes with their teeth instead of communicating any requests to humans for help, said The New York Times.

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