• FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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    7 days ago

    Horses have celebrities.

    Lions have Ducal Royalty: The males chase out the existing ruler, become the ruler, have lots of kids, get killed by another ducal house, all their kids are banished to the frontier, rinse and repeat.

    • Brem@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      They do.

      It’s “nature’s” way of pairing the best together, enabling long-term survival of the species & hopefully favouring the best genetic traits being passed along for future generations, hopefully ending in a permanent adaptation or evolutionary change.

      This is how I ended up with an entire army of genetically superior crows that sing musicals about how messed up it is that I did that to them with forced selective breeding.

    • eighty@aussie.zone
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      7 days ago

      If animals are aware of the apex predator and their habits, it’s not that far of a stretch to have “celebrity” status.

      Like distinguishing between “they’re hyper-aggressive” and “they’re chill if you leave them alone” is straight forward.

      Forgive me for anthromorphising(?) but pushing it to “holy shit, watch out for that guy I’ve seem him take out a crocodiles regularly” and “he’s been around longer than ANY of us - like how??” is just an elevated version of that. I can’t imagine “forgetting” who’s who is an effective trait in any ecosystem.

      The closest thing I can recall is bears and komodo dragons within a species

      • Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club
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        7 days ago

        It’s prob not anthropomorphism, our brainholes are too similar (same parts, but different parts are beefed up or shrunken down) & I think if we can feel something so are animals capable of a form of it (comparing feelings & thoughts between humans is already impossible).

        So yes, different entities are famous for different things. A human that is nice to birbs can get a cool status. One pack of wild dogs can defend a human from another.

  • finley@lemmy.zip
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    7 days ago

    When I lived in New York, there was a red tail hawk that a lot of of us were very interested in following. He landed on my fire escape a couple of times, and I got very excited.

    • homes@piefed.world
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      7 days ago

      holy shit, I saw that hawk! he landed on my fire escape once! I was so excited!

  • dontgogettingtooclever@piefed.social
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    7 days ago

    This dog park I used to go to had this one golden retriever that every other dog fawned over. If he was there, all the action was centered on him. So I think yes

  • Willing to bet Crows, Ravens, and other provably-intelligent birds actually do have something like this. A proto-culture, if you will. If you’re unaware, such birds have been put to tests of “comparative intelligence” to see what faculties of reasoning they have in common with us, and the results have been very interesting. Many animals (not just birds!) recognize themselves in the mirror as themselves rather than another member of their species (cats fail this test, elephants and dolphins don’t). Crows understand conservation of quantities and will put stones into a cylinder of water to raise the water level until a floating treat can be obtained.

    I’d be surprised if they didn’t have celebrities among their kind.

  • Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    7 days ago

    Territorial birds can tell which of their neighbors is singing, and show up to investigate if you play a song from a non-local male! So maybe local celebrities?