Why can parrots talk? - Grace Smith-Vidaurre and Tim Wright

1,283,972 views ・ 2022-06-23

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 2010, a parrot that spoke with the same British accent as his owner
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went missing.
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They were reunited four years later,
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but the intervening time left a conspicuous mark:
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the parrot had lost its British accent
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and was instead chattering away in Spanish.
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Parrots and several other birds are the only other animals
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that produce human speech.
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And some parrots do it almost uncannily well.
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How is this possible?
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Most wild parrots are highly social.
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They use vocalizations for mating and territorial displays
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and to coordinate group movements.
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Some species have flocks that continuously split and fuse,
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meaning individual parrots must be able to communicate with many others.
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Parrots use contact calls to interact
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and stay in touch when others are out of sight.
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01:02
But how exactly they use these calls depends on the species
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and the size of their flocks.
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Monk parakeets, for example, live in large colonies
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and have individualized contact calls that help them stand out.
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Yellow-naped Amazon parrots, on the other hand,
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forage in smaller groups that learn and share highly similar contact calls.
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This need for sophisticated mimicry may partially explain why yellow-naped Amazons
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and some other parrots can closely imitate a wide range of sounds—
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including the human voice.
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So, how does a parrot actually declare that “Polly wants a cracker”?
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A person would string these sounds together using their larynx,
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the organ at the top of their windpipe.
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It consists of rings of muscles and a vibrating membrane
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that controls airflow.
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They’d finely shape the vocalization into enunciated words
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using their tongue and lips.
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For a parrot, however, the sound would originate in its syrinx,
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located at the base of its windpipe.
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Many other birds have two vibrating membranes within this organ.
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But parrots, like us, have just one.
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As sounds leave the airway, parrots shape them using their tongues and beaks.
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They can do this because they have especially flexible, powerful tongues
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that help them manipulate seeds and nuts.
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And while parrots’ beaks are rigid, they have very flexible jaw joints,
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giving them a lot of control over how wide and how quickly
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they open their beaks.
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Like other animals with learned vocalizations,
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parrot brains contain interconnected regions that allow them
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to hear, remember, modify, and produce complex sounds.
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But while songbirds have just one song system in their brains,
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almost all parrots seem to have an additional circuit.
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Scientists think that this might give them extra flexibility
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when it comes to learning the calls of their own species— and ours.
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With this specialized anatomy,
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parrots can bark, scream, curse, and recite factoids.
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One intrepid lost parrot managed to get back home
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after repeating his full name and address to helpful strangers.
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But these impressive abilities raise another question:
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do parrots actually understand what they’re saying?
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When most captive parrots talk,
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they’re likely attempting to form social bonds in the absence of their own species.
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Many probably have associations with words
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and may be drawn to ones that elicit certain responses—
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hence their capacity for profanity.
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But, especially after training,
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parrots have been observed to say things in the appropriate contexts
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and assign meaning to words— saying “goodnight” at the end of the day,
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asking for certain treats, or counting and picking objects.
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One extensively trained African grey parrot named Alex
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became the first non-human animal to pose an existential question
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when he asked what color he was.
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Whether they’re belting Beyoncé, head-banging to classic rock,
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or rattling off cuss words at zoo-goers,
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parrots are constantly astounding us— as they have been for millennia.
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But our fascination with parrots has also made them vulnerable.
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Sought by poachers and pet traders,
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while losing their habitats to deforestation,
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wild populations have decreased dramatically.
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To truly understand parrots, we need to preserve and study them in the wild.
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