Researchers say ‘wheeze honks’ are identity signals, with reactions ranging from calls to spraying dung linked to level of familiarity

A call from a stranger may elicit myriad responses – panic, confusion, maybe even excitement – but it turns out that hippos have a rather more corporeal reaction: they spray dung.

Researchers studying hippopotamuses in Mozambique have revealed that the creatures not only react to the vocalisations of other hippos, but that the calls act as an identity signal. In other words, they allow hippos to tell the difference between a familiar individual and a stranger.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Rail route of the month: Barcelona to Cádiz, the slow train right across Spain

Our slow travel expert takes a 12-hour odyssey from Mediterranean Catalonia –…

‘A disaster waiting to happen’: who was really responsible for the fire at Moria refugee camp?

Days after fire destroyed the overcrowded camp, six inmates were charged with…

Soaring UK job losses show furlough extension may have come too late

Rishi Sunak’s response to Covid was not enough to halt a record…

Liz Truss appoints Jeremy Hunt as chancellor after sacking Kwarteng

Former foreign secretary and leadership contender is back in cabinet, in stunning…