AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explored the human-parrot bond by analyzing captive parrots' behaviors and facial displays during a separation-reunion test to assess their emotional responses.
  • - The test involved phases where the parrots were with a familiar caregiver, left alone, and then reunited, with observations indicating increased positive behaviors during the union and reunion.
  • - Results showed notable behavioral changes, such as higher feather heights and more contact-seeking actions during positive interactions, suggesting parrots can express positive feelings towards their caregivers.

Article Abstract

In mammals, human-animal bonding is recognized as a source of positive affect for companion or farm animals. Because this remains unexplored in birds, we investigated captive parrots' perspective of the human-animal relationship. We used a classical separation-reunion paradigm and predicted that variations in parrots' facial displays and behaviours would indicate their appraisal of the relationship. The test was divided into three phases of two minutes each: the bird was placed in an unfamiliar environment with a familiar caregiver (union), then the bird was left alone (separation) and finally, the caregiver returned (reunion). The test was repeated 10 times for each bird and video recorded in order to analyze their behaviour. The data show significantly higher crown and nape feather heights, higher redness of the skin and higher frequency of contact-seeking behaviours during the union and reunion phases than during the separation phase during which they expressed long distance contact calls. We observed the expression of eye pinning during the union and reunion phases in one out of five macaws. We argue that variation in facial displays provides indicators of parrot's positive appraisal of the caretaker presence. Our results broaden the scope for further studies on parrots' expression of their subjective feelings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2023.104833DOI Listing

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