Flexible use of a multi-purpose tool by a cow

88 pointsposted 16 days ago
by PlaceboGazebo

17 Comments

Meegul

11 days ago

    ________________________________________
  / "We report here our experimental        \
  | demonstration of flexible egocentric     |
  | tooling in a pet cow (Bos taurus),       |
  | Veronika, who uses a deck brush to self- |
  | scratch. Across randomized trials, she   |
  | preferred the bristled end but switched  |
  | to the stick end when targeting softer   |
  | lower-body areas. This adaptive          |
  | deployment of tool features reveals      |
  | multi-purpose tool use not previously    |
  \ reported in non-primate mammals."       /
    ----------------------------------------
           \   ^__^
            \  (oo)\_______
               (__)\       )\/\
                   ||----w |
                   ||     ||

ronsor

10 days ago

Finally an appropriate time to use cowsay!

heckelson

10 days ago

For me, the cow was just below the bottom of the screen, which caused me to first wonder what the heck and then get great comic relief after scrolling down!

mitchell_h

10 days ago

I'm a small time cattle rancher and raise a few pigs per year. Also friends with many fellow ranchers. My only response to this is entirely "duh". Cows and pigs maybe dumb, but they figure things out with trial and error at an amazing rate.

IAmBroom

9 days ago

Also, using a stick as a scratching tool is not really on the same spectrum as flint-knapping a knife, sun-baking a pinchpot, or sharpening a fire-hardened spear point.

This is like those articles that claim that trees "communicate" because they exude more waste products under duress, or somesuch horseshit.

elil17

11 days ago

I feel that the tool lacked something in sophistication

user

11 days ago

[deleted]

user

11 days ago

[deleted]

hmartiniano

10 days ago

Someone should nominate the authors for an ig Nobel prize.

stefanka

11 days ago

Love the video. And Veronika

lacoolj

11 days ago

I love you, Veronica!