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Parade Pets on MSNPeekaboo Cockatoo Is Convinced His Human Mom Is Hiding Under the NightstandStudies have shown they are about as smart as an average toddler, and one way you can keep your Cockatoo mentally stimulated ...
Bella and Trixie are two adorable cockatoos who love to get their groove on. They also enjoy hanging out outside when the ...
The "Dora's Song for Papi" episode, featuring Taboo's new song "Melodía," premiered Wednesday (July 2) on Paramount+.
Cockatoos love to chew, so providing a continuous supply of non-toxic wood or bird-safe toys will keep them entertained and prevent your furniture or household items from being destroyed.
Birds in Sydney’s western suburbs have figured out how to get a sip from the fountains, even though they have access to nearby streams ...
Moluccan cockatoos are not popular birds in coconut plantations, as they attack young coconuts, chew through the tough outer layer, and reach the soft inner pulp, which they feed on.
Wild cockatoos learn to open bins by copying others—first evidence of social learning. Only decades ago, such cultural behaviors were thought to be a uniquely human trait.
In an impressive feat of rapid urban adaptation, sulphur-crested cockatoos have worked out how to use their feet and their large bodies to twist the tap handles of drinking fountains in order to ...
Cockatoos are real problem solvers, and sometimes their problem is that their food is too bland. A new study by cognitive biologists has found that some cockatoos will solve that problem the same ...
‘Opportunistic’ cockatoos wait in line, drink from fountains, study finds. The birds, which have also opened trash bins, were filmed operating fountain handles with complex maneuvers.
Most birds go for ease when looking for drinking water. But the sulfur-crested cockatoos in the suburbs of Sydney, Australia, often prefer to quench their thirst with a challenging puzzle.
Cockatoos in Sydney, Australia, have learned to use public water fountains by twisting a handle, despite how difficult they are for birds to operate. It seems to be a behaviour they copy from each ...
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