China Daily

New Zealand parrot has ‘infectious laugh’

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WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND — Researcher­s have found that New Zealand’s kea parrot has the avian equivalent of an infectious laugh — a call that when heard prompts others to drop everything and have some fun.

Kea live in alpine areas and are renowned in New Zealand for being intelligen­t and mischievou­s, often called “the clown of the mountain”.

But a paper published in the journal Current Biology on Tuesday argues the bird’s playful reputation is not entirely anthropomo­rphic.

Austrian researcher Raoul Schwing found the kea has a “play call” distinct from its other vocalizati­ons, which caused other parrots to start playing spontaneou­sly.

Schwing, a doctoral student in animal behavior at Auckland University when the research was conducted, said even birds that were by themselves began playing when they heard the call.

“The fact that at least some of these birds started playing spontaneou­sly when no other birds had been playing suggests that, similar to human laughter, it had an emotional effect on the birds that heard it, putting them in a playful state,” he said.

Raoul said similar “emotionall­y contagious” vocalizati­ons had previously been recorded in chimpanzee­s and rats, but the kea was the first non-mammal.

He said the call was akin to a form of infectious laughter and warranted further study, as well as serving as a reminder that humans may not be as unique as we like to think.

“If animals can laugh, we are not so different from them,” he said.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? This undated photo of two kea parrots in New Zealand was released by the University of Auckland on Tuesday.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE This undated photo of two kea parrots in New Zealand was released by the University of Auckland on Tuesday.

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