wild turkeys seem to be smarter than tame turkeys, especially the broad-breasted varieties
Most species, under domestication, exhibit decreased brain volume. In turks (BB's) the decrease: 30%-35%. Whether this impacts behavior is an open question (but it's probably not a beneficial `development').
chickensducks&agoose wrote: Mine spent 3 days trying to eat their own toes. They'd look down, bend over, and YANK, flip themselves on their backs trying to eat their toes... they also had a funny habit of napping with their heads in the feeder. Standing up, bending forward with their heads stuffed in the hole in the feeder
So, what happened on the 4th day? Were they brooded by a hen, or were they on their own? Like to see a video of that toe munching behavior. When I read that the first thing I thought of was trichotillomania in humans (compulsive `pulling'
).
I could see them snoozing off in a feeder. Our turks (particularly the males) sleep hard and deep and aren't particular about location (kind of like a bored `mall husband' drooling on his shirt, snoring away, as shoppers and gawkers stroll past his bench `roost').
The three poults destined to be toms always fell out on the floor of the brooder, the two that would be hens always slept on one of the roost bars:
During breeding season both sexes exhibit considerable erosion of a certain flexibility of `mind', fixity of procreative purpose holding sway over all (in the Oval Office with a cigar...).
Ours are certainly not socially `challenged'. They exhibit a wider range of intergradiation of vocal signaling than our chooks (distinct differences in `tones' of `wheets' trills, etc. when Cass is out with them, as compared to how they `address' me).
(more on `drowning'):
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=99573&p=1