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ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

Imprinting (2 Viewers)

Hi again, since you already have a post in the hello forum I’m moving this to another forum where you might get some good answers.
 
If I remember well, sometimes it can sometimes it does not. But not all birds imprint or imprint strongly.
 
Common cuckoos, of course, don't imprint on their parents. Cuckoo females allegedly learn to lay egg in the same nest as they grew up. But sometimes one gets unusual cuckoos (e.g. one parasitizing only Whinchats) so they must sometimes switch. I think the general image of a fast and unbreakable imprinting is rather the extreme end of a whole spectrum of learning.

There is a small organization now in Poland now which rescues nests of waders and gulls threatened by floods and predators, raises chicks and releases them. And at last some of these birds (identified by rings) complete their normal migration, return and breed successfully, so their behavior must be largely instinctive.
 
This is quite a problem with corvids in rescue. I think they can remain imprinted on a human but can be re-wilded as it were, by socialising them with their own kind or at least other corvids, in an aviary environment with view to releasing them. That way they can be weaned off their human and learn how to behave in a more natural setting. They might always have an attachment to their particular human if they are available to them, but they get used to it when the majority of the time is with other birds and that human only provides basic care.
 

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