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Old 03-04-2015, 11:54 PM  
baddog
So Fucking Banned
 
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: the beach, SoCal
Posts: 107,089
I tried to read this entire thread but I could feel my brain getting ready to implode over some of the commentary.


Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmonsters View Post
So is the dog thinking ahead that he will be able to smell and find the food tomorrow?
Or is he just burying it because like WTF?

I take it you have never seen a nature program or you think dogs are different than every other creature on the planet.

Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmonsters View Post
What about squirrels, do they remember what tree hole they put the nuts in or do they
sniff it out like a dog?


Actually, depending on the breed(?) of squirrel, losing a few of the nuts is what causes new trees.

Quote:
Different Methods of Food Storage

Different types of squirrels practice different food storage methods. Douglas squirrels and North American red squirrels store food in a central location, called a midden, within their territory. This method is called larder-hoarding. Often the midden is located in a tree cavity, under leaves, or in branch forks. Some squirrels store their food for a short period of time, such as the African tree squirrel, which will stick half eaten nuts in branches to come back for a few hours later. The most common way squirrels store their food is by burying it in scattered caches around their territory to dig up later when food is scarce, such as in winter. This way is usually favorable because it makes it harder for other animals or squirrels to pilfer their reserves as it's scattered in many different locations.
Detecting Caches by Smell

It was previously assumed that squirrels did not remember where they stored food, but rather uncovered it through scent. Squirrels do use smell partly to uncover buried caches, and they often find and steal at least a nut or two from other squirrels' caches, which they can detect by the odor. Scent can prove unreliable, however. When the ground is too dry or covered in snow, squirrels are more interested in digging up their own food caches even when they can smell other caches nearby.
Detecting Caches by Spatial Memory

According to the study "Grey Squirrels Remember the Locations of Buried Nuts," published in Princeton University's journal "Animal Behavior," squirrels use spatial memory often to locate stored food. The study shows squirrels go back more often to their own food caches than to the caches of other squirrels, suggesting that they use memory to locate their food. Squirrels often bury their food near landmarks that aid them in remembering where they stored the food. The study also suggests that squirrels bury food in a series of locations that help them form a cognitive map of all storage locations.
Quote:
Originally Posted by AdultKing View Post
This is all theoretical bullshit.

My dog goes fucking ballistic if she sees another dog on the tv, through the window, driving past one in a car, yet seeing herself on the tv in home videos or walking past the many mirrors in this house doesn't do a thing.
My dog reacts to bears on TV; and wolf howls

Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmonsters View Post
" Dogs don't plan for particular future events"

Yep, that's why my grand daddy told me to crawl under the house and
give the dog some water, because she just happen to wonder under the house where
she never goes and then bam! some puppies popped out.

And stupid squirrels building nest without any expectation of tree sex.

Okay then
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