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Why Walk when you can HOP?
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Added by Mel in Pets And Animals
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EIGHT goat mamas are due over the next week or so so we will be busy!!! Rosemary, Khaleesi, Abigail, Greta, Olive, Elsie, May and Clementine are all on deck!

Gah, I just love goat babies so much. I woke up in the middle of the night and looked at the barn cam and all 7 kids were having a dance party! It looked like the younger 4 all found their hops at the same moment! So cute!

Today I let Larry, Joni, Josephine, Aggie, Benjamin, Lulu and Dimond all out at once together to play! The mothers did a great job sorting out which kids belonged to them and worked very hard to keep track of each kid as they hopped around!

Why all the baaahing? Check out this cool research!! "Mother goats do not forget the sound of their kids' voices, even a year after they have been weaned and separated, according to scientists from Queen Mary, University of London. Writing in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, Dr Elodie Briefer and Dr Alan McElligott from Queen Mary's School of Biological and Chemical Sciences (and Monica Padilla de la Torre at the University of Nottingham) found that mother goats remember the calls of their kids for up to 11-17 months (7-13 months after weaning). In most species, parents and their offspring mainly use vocalizations to recognize each other at long distances. The team studied nine pygmy goat mothers and their kids between 2009 and 2011. They recorded the kid calls at five weeks old and played the calls back to the mothers 12-18 months later. They found that the mother goats were not only able to recognize their individual kids' calls at five weeks, but still remembered them at least one year after weaning. This suggests that even after kids are separated from their mother, the memory remains and mothers can still differentiate their kids' calls from the calls of other animals' offspring. Dr. Briefer explains: "Because of the difficulties involved in following the same individuals over years, long-term recognition has been studied in only a few species. Our study shows that animals remember socially important partners. This behavior could help mother goats and their daughters to maintain social relationships, and could also prevent mother goats mating with their sons, when those are sexually mature. Long-term recognition of social partners helps to maintain social relationships in group-living species. This could be particularly important in species that experience long periods of separation, like migration or hibernation, or that live in complex societies, like goats. Dr. McElligott adds: 'Understanding the cognitive capacities of our domestic animals is important for animal welfare and providing the best possible living conditions, particularly if they have such long memories.'"

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