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- Aug 23, 2020
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Thank you!Glad to hear Sergeant Pepper mage it out and is doing OK!
All your babies are positively adorable!![]()
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Thank you!Glad to hear Sergeant Pepper mage it out and is doing OK!
All your babies are positively adorable!![]()
Hmm that's a good question.OK so I have a question. From what I know, a worry with many human raised wild birds is them imprinting on humans, and as a result not breeding with other specimens of their species. If so, how can we hatch chicks in our incubators, sometimes a human being the first thing they see, and yet they still mate with the right species when mature?
Hmm that's a good question.
Total guess, but we so often still confine them in a no-escape scenario with others of their kind, both as young and later as adults, with no alternatives, that instinct still wins out. I'm sure it helps to have almost no standards, as well. I've seen roosters try to mate shoes, feeding bowls... Bound to hit the right target eventually!!
On the other hand, songbirds seem very picky, so maybe imprinting and missing correct behavioral and visual training is an insurmountable social setback for them.
I had a Quail chick bond with me instantly at hatch, she was the first in the batch to hatch. She was a screamer, I mean I couldn't walk away from the brooder and she'd scream loudly. ALL night long too for the first 2 weeks!OK so I have a question. From what I know, a worry with many human raised wild birds is them imprinting on humans, and as a result not breeding with other specimens of their species. If so, how can we hatch chicks in our incubators, sometimes a human being the first thing they see, and yet they still mate with the right species when mature?
I had a Quail chick bond with me instantly at hatch, she was the first in the batch to hatch. She was a screamer, I mean I couldn't walk away from the brooder and she'd scream loudly. ALL night long too for the first 2 weeks!You know, she bonded with me so well, she never took a mate on all her life. Bobwhites chose their mates and mate for life with one male, she ignored every male that tried to court her. She waited for me every day to come sit and hang out with her, she'd squat for me when I went to pet her, she'd looked at me with loving eyes.... but she remained a loner all her life and I believe because her bond to me at hatch was so strong.
Oh wow! So it does happen in fowl. But what are the criteria? I can't seem to find a pattern, to help me avoid coming across this in the future
I don't think it's all that common in chickens, they've been domesticated for thousands of years and around humans a long time and may have developed a sense to know better than to think they can mate with a human.This is probably what determines how easily, and how deeply imprinting affects the bird. I've definitely seen more cases of ducks being imprinted on humans, and I know ducks are semi-monogamous, pairing off for each season, and possibly more than one. What you said about chickens still going through some sort of imprinting process, and thus exhibiting behaviours such as squatting, and breeding of random objects and human boots makes a lot of sense. I guess I'll have to put a stock photo of a mumma hen around the incubator at lockdown![]()
I don't think it's all that common in chickens, they've been domesticated for thousands of years and around humans a long time and may have developed a sense to know better than to think they can mate with a human.Bobwhite Quail on the other hand are new on the scene to being raised by humans, and the instinct to imprint on the first big shape they see or hear singing to them, which I do during incubation,
is still quite strong. I don't think you will have any issues with your birds.