The Highly Intelligent New Zealand Alpine Parrot 🦜 | Smithsonian Channel

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 60

  • @QuantumMechanic_88
    @QuantumMechanic_88 2 года назад +8

    Travel to New Zealand and meet the world's most intelligent thief. The Kea is my favorite bird.

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Quantum Mechanic, look at bird bath

  • @b.visconti1765
    @b.visconti1765 2 года назад +9

    Ms birdwatcher here loving this in California 🤓

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      b.visconti, look at bird bath

  • @karenpiotte90
    @karenpiotte90 2 года назад +21

    Adorable hard workers and smart! Hope their numbers grow!

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Karen Piotte, look at bird bath

    • @Fenrirsleeps
      @Fenrirsleeps Год назад +1

      Funny fact the learned to hunt sheep by landing on them and eating them slowly alive since the sheep won’t fight back

  • @elvajaramillo3767
    @elvajaramillo3767 2 года назад +9

    Aww this is so lovely 😍 MAGNIFICENT ‼️

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Elva Jaramillo, look at bird bath

  • @giannaleng1897
    @giannaleng1897 Год назад +5

    I love how belligerent is an adjective used to describe these birds 😂

  • @bestofnature-h7i
    @bestofnature-h7i 2 года назад +3

    KEAS DO NOT ATTACK!!

  • @loboalamo
    @loboalamo 2 года назад +8

    I learned some new things today.

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      In my field, look at bird bath

  • @zweij
    @zweij 2 года назад +12

    They are beautiful! Thanks for this well done video. The cinematography is as always magnificent. I will show this video to my mom, who is also an avid birdlover. Thanks!

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      juliazwei, look at bird bath

  • @Lemev
    @Lemev 2 года назад +5

    Very scary when its beak got to close to its partner's eye!!!!

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Lemev, look at bird bath

  • @darrentan4579
    @darrentan4579 Год назад +2

    Kea Frozen Planet 2

  • @RockDodger
    @RockDodger 2 года назад +4

    I love their call. Amazing birds!

  • @92acf75
    @92acf75 Год назад +1

    Kea is an amazing bird

  • @i_am_a_freespirit
    @i_am_a_freespirit 2 года назад +5

    Wow how cute 🥰

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      I_am_a freespirit, look at bird bath

  • @einienj3281
    @einienj3281 2 года назад +4

    I love them! Adorable!

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      EinieN J, look at bird bath

  • @cshirmer8416
    @cshirmer8416 2 года назад +3

    So precious !🙏🦜🙏

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      C Shirmer, look at bird bath

  • @kimwalsh
    @kimwalsh 2 года назад +2

    I love birds most of all animals

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 2 года назад

      Same 🦉🦅🐦🦜🕊️🦢🦩🦚🦃🦆🐧🐓🐣🐥🪶🪹🪺💚

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Kim Walsh, look at bird bath

  • @CDGMR1
    @CDGMR1 2 года назад

    HaShem created perfection and beauty.

  • @BirdBath1
    @BirdBath1 2 года назад +2

    Keas are remarkable birds: playful, belligerent and smart

  • @L_Train
    @L_Train Год назад

    It's wearing a bracelet. Is that a tag for tracking?

  • @darrentan4579
    @darrentan4579 Год назад +1

    New Zealand 🇳🇿

  • @boson2916
    @boson2916 2 года назад

    Hey kid wait! you can't join in the romance yet 2:33. These smart young Keas are learning fast to be romantic.

  • @NASSER-NAM
    @NASSER-NAM 2 года назад +1

    ❤lovely

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Naserati, look at bird bath

  • @readmeee
    @readmeee 2 года назад

    Why are their feet tagged with something?

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 2 года назад +2

      It's called leg-bands, or leg-rings. These are fitted to a bird to collect scientific data on its behavior and lifespan.

    • @readmeee
      @readmeee 2 года назад

      @@EyeSeeThruYou Not cool, but thanks for explaining.

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 2 года назад +3

      @@readmeee The leg ringing does not harm the bird, and the data the rings make possible to collect can be used to guide conservation policy and legal protections. What helps protect the bird from human destruction is good.

    • @readmeee
      @readmeee 2 года назад

      @@EyeSeeThruYou Isn't it using Wifi or Bluetooth to transmit data? That can't be healthy for the bird. Radiation at the foot. It's that close.

    • @paulg3336
      @paulg3336 2 года назад +3

      @@readmeee It's a simple metal band that has been used to mark birds for scientific purposes since 1669 and for ownership since 218 BC

  • @FunctionFIVE
    @FunctionFIVE Год назад +1

    They peel the flesh from the sheep

  • @EyeSeeThruYou
    @EyeSeeThruYou 2 года назад +7

    This is a really wonderful short about an iconic species which accomplished something analogous to what Penguins did in the antarctic and sub-antarctic: they evolved to occupy a niche in colder climes to beat out the competition (other parrots and animals). 🏔️🗻
    *AMAZING!* 👍👏
    I do have two questions, however:
    1) Why is the pair-bonding behavior depicted being described as "play-fighting" when it's clear that the male regurgitated a food gift to the female, which is the general objective of the behavioral ritual?
    That's not "fighting," even as play, as it's a very common behavior documented in a multitude of Psittacines to strengthen the pair bond.
    In adult birds, it's often the male which initiates it and provides a regurgitated food-gift to the female, but not always; sometimes the female initiates the display while the male will then usually produce a food-gift to her.
    Parent birds of many species do this as well.
    2) Irene Pepperberg, PhD (and others) established the estimated equivalent cognitive ability of Psittacines to be closer to a 7 year old human.
    Is there a factor which exists in Kea brain anatomy which would reduce neural capacity relative to other Psittacines?
    It would seem that evolutionary adaptations favoring the ability to survive in harsher environs would actually increase that propensity, not reduce or diminish it.

    • @zweij
      @zweij 2 года назад +4

      Thanks for such interesting questions. I will also wait for the response

  • @ElizabethDMadison
    @ElizabethDMadison 2 года назад +1

    That is not play-fighting, it is a stylized courtship/"romantic" version of the male regurgitating food to feed the female (like they do to feed chicks). They don't necessarily actually regurgitate food when they do it.

  • @collinsoconnor5843
    @collinsoconnor5843 2 года назад

    Kias are actually endemic to the Abardeer Mountains in Kenya 🇰🇪

    • @cameron2982
      @cameron2982 2 года назад +2

      No they're not they're from New Zealand

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      Collins O'Connor, look at bird bath

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 2 года назад

      @@BirdBath1 *Kea* are endemic to New Zealand only. Not found anywhere else in the world.

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      @@EyeSeeThruYou read my name, look at the birds i have

    • @BirdBath1
      @BirdBath1 2 года назад

      @@cameron2982 look at bird bath

  • @goodfox9250
    @goodfox9250 Год назад

    Scientist that believe certain animals are as smart as a young child never had kids.