Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Monk Parakeets ‘Test the Waters’ To Form New Friendships, Study Finds

Controlled experiments with computational modeling show strangers progress from cautious proximity to affiliative contact.

Overview

  • Researchers observed wild-caught monk parakeets in a large flight pen and analyzed more than 179 relationships using computational and statistical models.
  • Unfamiliar birds approached each other cautiously at first, then typically moved from sharing space to perching together, touching beaks, and grooming.
  • Some pairs advanced further as trust grew, eventually sharing food or mating.
  • Careful approaches help manage risk because unwanted attention can trigger mild aggression or “quarreling,” creating a possibility of injury.
  • The findings, published in Biology Letters by Claire L. O’Connell, Gerald G. Carter, Annemarie van der Marel and Elizabeth A. Hobson, parallel a 2020 study showing similar stepwise bonding in vampire bats.