A kea parrot in New Zealand missing its upper beak has become the dominant male of his group by inventing a novel fighting technique. Named Bruce, the bird uses a 'jousting' method with his lower beak ...
This kea parrot wasn't going to let a broken beak slow him down and he used it to gain respect from the rest of the flock.
Bruce the kea parrot is missing his entire upper beak. By every measure of animal competition, he should be at the bottom of ...
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Parrot missing half his beak became the alpha male of his group
Bruce the kea parrot is missing his entire upper beak. By every measure of animal competition, he should be at the bottom of ...
A kea parrot missing the entire upper half of his beak has become the dominant male of his social group — and in doing so, ...
Bruce’s alpha position was reflected not only in combat, but also in measurable benefits across social interactions.” ...
A disabled kea parrot, missing half its beak, became the alpha male of his group by creating a completely new fighting ...
Meet Bruce, a captive kea parrot missing his upper beak, and the “first example of a disabled animal of any species ...
Bruce the kea is missing his entire upper beak. Yet he is the alpha bird of his circus (the apt collective noun for a group ...
Patrick Wood/University of Auckland. At New Zealand’s Willowbank Wildlife Reserve, an endangered kea parrot named Bruce sits ...
The native parrot's inqiuisitive nature means it is nibbling at things that are toxic and potentially fatal, including lead-based materials found in old roofs, paint and nail heads. Eight have been ...
Bruce, a disabled kea parrot, is missing his top beak. The bird uses tools to keep himself healthy and developed a jousting ...
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