I Can't Help but Admire the Trash-Stealing Parrots of Australia

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Welcome to the first installment of Gizmodo’s Animal Crime of the Week, a regular exploration of animals and their bad behavior (but hey, it’s only natural). And what better place to start than by highlighting an animal crime ring so notorious that it’s now being intensively studied by scientists? Meet the trash-stealing cockatoo parrots of Australia.

Remake this Sci-Fi Film with Peter Capaldi!

For years, groups of sulphur-crested cockatoos in Sydney, Australia have been breaking into people’s trashbins and pilfering the glorious garbage within. The practice seems to have begun sometime before 2018, though only among birds in a few suburbs. Over time, however, the behavior spread across Southern Sydney, with birds in different neighborhoods slightly tweaking their methods of burglary. In some areas, for instance, the parrots would flip the trash lid open entirely, while in others the birds would just lift it up partway.

Non-human animals that socialize are thought to commonly share and shape learned behaviors among each other. But the birds’ adopted trash-picking habits seem to be one of the clearest examples of animal culture ever observed up close.

“Our [research] adds to the evidence that other animals have culture, and shows how new innovations can spread across populations to lead to new behaviors,” Lucy Aplin, an animal behavior researcher at the Max Planck Institute whose team has been studying the birds for years, told Gizmodo in 2021.

Unfortunately, in this case, one cockatoo’s tasty treasure is another person’s turned-over trash. The emergence of this behavior has led to a cultural clash between the parrots and their human neighbors, and a sort of arms race between the two has begun.

People have tried to stop the birds from breaking into trashbins by placing bricks on top of them, for instance, only for the birds to learn how to push them off. That in turn has led some people to adopt other anti-parrot measures, like specialized locks. Interestingly enough, the humans have started to mimic the birds by spreading the most effective tricks to one another.

Where this trash dispute will end, no one really knows.

“One could imagine that it will continue to escalate (i.e. cockatoos learning to defeat higher-level protection types, and people coming up with even better devices to protect their bins) or it could be that one party ‘wins’ the arms race,” Barbara Klump, a behavioral ecologist at the Max Planck Institute, told Gizmodo in 2022.

Either way, it’s an elegant illustration of the unexpected ways that animals and humans can interact with each other.

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