Chickens are naturally social animals. The wild ancestor of the chicken, the red junglefowl, lives in flocks of around 2-15 adults, consisting of a dominant male, hens (and their chicks), and, possibly, some lower ranking males. In a human setting, chickens may live in groups of 3-4 when kept as pets, or up to 10,000 when raised on an industrial scale.
Nevertheless, no matter what size the group in which chickens live, communication always plays a key role in their social lives. Even before they hatch, chicks “peep” to each other from inside their eggs. This can help them coordinate their hatching times. For chicks ‘safety in numbers’ is an important motto; the more that hatch together, the safer each will be from predators. Throughout their lives chickens continue to communicate with each other to, among other things, keep their flock together, warn each other of dangers, attract mates and share food. Over the last decades, scientists have been listening in on chicken communication and discovering not only that it is rather complex, but it also shows evidence of some impressive mental abilities.
COMPLEX COMMUNICATION
Most people know at least one sound a chicken can make — “cluck cluck cluck”, “cockadoodle-doo”, “bwaark”, and so on, but did you know that the humble chicken has a vocabulary of around 24 different calls? Few other animals have such a vast vocal repertoire and those that do, for example primates and corvids (members of the crow family), are considered rather intelligent. Not only do chickens use many different calls, but, just like humans, they each have an individually distinct voice allowing them to recognise each other by sound.
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Esta historia es de la edición August 2020 de Country Smallholding.
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