Posted by:
PHRatz
at Mon Jul 31 10:47:34 2006 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by PHRatz ]
>>Now, the chipmunks keep burrowing in and getting trapped again and again. The "danger" doesn't seem to sink in. However, neither Spark or Spike have been caught more than once!
>>
>>Does this say something about animal intellegence?
Rodents tend to be very intelligent but... it really does depend on the species. The rat species I keep as pets are descended from laboratory rats which are descended from the wild Norway rat, the brown rat. As pets and in the wild they have test animals in their colonies. They will shy away from foods until the test animal has eaten it & the rest see if it's ok. Chipmunks are a totally different type of rodent so maybe they aren't so intelligent as a rat?
LOL
Turtles and tortoises seem to have long memories though. We have mulberry trees which didn't bear fruit this year thanks to the weather but in the years they do I find wild turtles on the other side of the fence where one of the trees hangs over & drops fruit for them. Our sulcata tortoise isn't supposed to eat fruit, the first year that she found mulberries she ate some before I could pick them up then they made her stomach horribly upset. She remembers that, she won't eat them when she sees them now. That's intelligent!
Here's a girl I found last year on the other side of the fence after the mulberries started falling off the tree:
----- PHRatz
[ Hide Replies ]
- boxie intellegence - golfdiva, Sun Jul 30 21:05:27 2006
RE: boxie intellegence - PHRatz, Mon Jul 31 10:47:34 2006 
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