Injured kea parrot rises to alpha male with half a beak

A kea named Bruce, rescued in 2013 after losing the upper half of his beak, has become the dominant male in a captive colony at Willowbank Wildlife Reserve in New Zealand. Researchers found he uses his sharp lower beak as a weapon to outmatch larger rivals. The bird's success highlights behavioral innovation overcoming physical disadvantage.

In 2013, a malnourished and undersized kea was discovered struggling in Arthur’s Pass on New Zealand’s South Island. The endangered bird, missing the upper part of its beak likely due to trauma, was rescued by a student of Ximena Nelson at the University of Canterbury and taken to Willowbank Wildlife Reserve in Christchurch. Initially named Kati and thought to be female, a DNA test revealed it was male and renamed Bruce. Despite weighing just 800 grams compared to over a kilogram for other males, Bruce quickly established dominance in a group of nine males and three females, known as a 'circus' of kea. Nelson explained that Bruce wields his straight, sharp lower beak to joust rivals, toppling into them with serious jabs that send others fleeing with wings in the air. Larger males cannot counter effectively because their upper mandibles cover their lower beaks, resulting in blunt impacts. Over four weeks, observers recorded 162 aggressive interactions among the males; Bruce won all 36 in which he participated. He controls the four feeding stations, enlists lower-status birds to clean and preen him, and shows the lowest stress hormone levels due to his secure status. The researchers describe Bruce as the first known case, aside from humans, of a severely injured animal achieving and maintaining alpha status through behavioral innovation alone. No prosthetic beak repair was needed. 'I really like Bruce,' Nelson said. 'When there is reason to fight, yeah, he’ll fight and he’ll fight hard, and scrappy. But he’s not a bully.'

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Bonobo Kanzi points to imaginary 'juice' during pretend-play test in Johns Hopkins study on animal cognition.
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Study finds bonobo Kanzi tracked imaginary “juice” and “grapes” in pretend-play tests

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A new study has found that releasing rescued Bengal slow lorises into the wild can lead to deadly territorial conflicts. Researchers tracked nine animals in a Bangladeshi national park and discovered only two survived, with most killed by other lorises. The findings highlight the need for better planning in wildlife reintroduction efforts.

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Scientists from the UK and Kenya have identified a new bat coronavirus capable of binding to human cells. The study, published in Nature, highlights risks in Kenya, northern Tanzania, and eastern Sudan. No evidence of human infection has been found yet.

 

 

 

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