• theUwUhugger@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      You should try googling mate! Wolves have been observed to hunt with crows (crows locate it, wolves kill it, crows get the leftovers), their coexistence is in fact to the point where crows play with wolf puppies (chasing games and tug of wars have been observed)! Due to this cooperation wolves have evolved and do recognize and treat these members of their packs differently! Which you too can observe if you own a dog, as it does not treat you like another dog! In opposition to cats, who despite also living in colonies do not cooperate with other species nor with each other really (with exemptions to raising their little ones, they supervise each other if the mom and dad goes hunting at the same time). They are not really capable of recognizing other than prey, cat, danger

      https://www.petmd.com/dog/pet-lover/can-dogs-tell-difference-between-dogs-and-other-animals

      https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/140127-cats-pets-animals-nation-dogs-people-science

      Edit: @Goodeye8 is lying, he made that quote up! Please use a word search in the source before you take his nonsense ok face value

      • Goodeye8@piefed.social
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        4 months ago

        From the very Nat Geo article you linked:

        I’ve read articles where you’ve said cats think of us as big, stupid cats. Is that accurate?

        No. In the book [I say] that cats behave toward us in a way that’s indistinguishable from [how] they would act toward other cats. They do think we’re clumsy: Not many cats trip over people, but we trip over cats.

        But I don’t think they think of us as being dumb and stupid, since cats don’t rub on another cat that’s inferior to them.

        They might not be able to understand that we’re a completely different species but they do understand that we’re not your average cat (another evidence of that is that cats generally don’t meow between each other but they do meow with humans) and they definitely don’t view us as terrible or incompetent. They view us as clumsy because based on how they see the world we are in general pretty clumsy.

        Bit off topic but another interesting fact is that if we factor in fine motor skills we’re the least clumsiest animal on the planet. Cats have excellent gross motor skills but you don’t see them threading a needle. And very few animals could thread a needle because, well for a multitude of reasons but primarily because most animals simply can’t get that level of precision out of their limbs or mouth or trunk or whatever they would have to use. But for us that is so easy we don’t even question the level of complexity and precision we’re showcasing. Gross motor skills looks like it might bring us down but we’re actually very adaptive when it comes to gross motor skills (see parkour, rock climbing or just gymnastics). We simply don’t spend time developing those skills because most of us never need it. We don’t need to climb over fallen trees or crawl under bushes because if a lot of people need to use that route we just pave a road.

          • Goodeye8@piefed.social
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            4 months ago

            The image says that. The other person asked for a source for that statement and you gave sources without correcting the terrible incompetent part. I think it’s a fair interpretation that you implied it.

            • theUwUhugger@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              I didn’t?

              And you taking the issue with someone saying incompetent instead of clumsy, with me no less who is not the author nor the poster,is a very intelligent! Hope your glasses certificate gonna be revoked and then you won’t be seeing properly!

              • Goodeye8@piefed.social
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                4 months ago

                I’m just going to ignore the absolute nonsense you just wrote and say that it’s not my problem if you’re incapable of acknowledging a mistake. Go have a day and don’t bother me.

    • Madrigal@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      It’s utter rubbish. Just look at how cats react to unfamiliar humans compared to unfamiliar cats. They know the difference.

      • toddestan@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I’d say even go further and say they differentiate more than that. I remember seeing an adult house cat encounter sheep for the first time. He very clearly and obviously recognized that these were new creatures he’d never seen before. They weren’t another cat, nor were they human. His reaction was very interesting to watch. He was extremely leery and cautious of the sheep - but at the same time also very curious about them. After a bit he figured out that the sheep weren’t a threat, and that he could approach them and the sheep would more or less just ignore him.

    • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 months ago

      not a source, but as a cat enthusiast i’d say it’s kinda sorta true but not to the degree that’s implied, it’s more like cats just generally don’t bother to treat other animals differently unless it’s prey, while dogs do go “hey this isn’t a dog so i’ll be a bit careful about how i communicate with them”, but then that could also just be due to training.

  • Aggravationstation@feddit.uk
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    4 months ago

    Nope. Cats have been proven to consistently meow or vocalise in a different way to humans than other cats. So they know the difference.