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SuperSquirrel

| Posted by Sumangali Morhall | Permanent Link | Nature
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squirrel.jpg


I watched a mastermind at work this morning. After appreciating the thorough and tidy job he made of burying his treasure, I wondered with some concern how he would find it again when his tummy starts to rumble in mid-December… not to mention the other 9,999 treasures that scientific study claims he will bury this autumn.

To some he may just be an arboreal rodent with a brain the size of marshmallow… but what’s the point in having a brain the size of a melon if you only use a small percentage of it? Us humans might do well to take a tutorial from these little critters on the optimal use of our hippocampi. We might then stave off Alzheimer’s, or at least find our car keys.

"These squirrels are not putting any flag there, they are not smelling the nuts, they are really remembering the exact location of their nuts," said neuroscience researcher Pierre Lavenex. "They use information from the environment, such as the relative position of trees and buildings, and they triangulate, relying on the angles and distances between these distant landmarks and their caches."

Such a feat would not be possible for humans, said Lavenex. "People can do this for a few sites, maybe six or seven, but not for nearly as many as squirrels do," he said.

squirrel-2.jpg


Amazing, no? And who said God doesn’t exist?

In fact there is a whole site aimed at proving scientifically (though not systematically) that God exists…(good luck, guys)...and right there is an article called The Incredible Squirrel.

It raises the interesting point that if the squirrel’s brain were any more efficient, allowing it to find more than the usual 20% of its stash, we wouldn’t have so many trees sprouting up from the buried nuts (and I guess there would be some frighteningly big squirrels out there).


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Comments

2007-11-02 04:26 PM | Posted by Claudia
Squirrels are my most favourate animal. Quite often while walking or running I see them in the area where I live. So I enjoyed your stories and the pictures very much.
Thank you
Claudia
2006-09-23 12:32 AM | Posted by Shardul Dillicar | http://www.srichinmoycentre.org/Members/shardul/blog
We don't have squirells in New Zealand. (I'm sure you can tell by the way I just spelt squirrel.) So when I visit New York, it is fun to watch the way that they chase each other through the trees - a hilarious high-speed dizzying (at least to the observer) dash in crazy spirals up hill and down dale - hither and thither. Did anyone see the cartoon movie 'Over The Hedge' yet? I saw it on the plane coming home from New York in August. The squirrel scene toward the end is hilarious. Ya just gotta love those crazy brainy pumped-up skwirils!
2006-09-01 10:36 AM | Posted by Priyadarshan Bontempi
You are spoiling us, with these delightful posts. Not only beautiful, but really enriching. Thank you.
2006-09-01 09:12 AM | Posted by John Gillespie | http://www.srichinmoycentre.org/john_gillespie
Thank you for sharing that deliciously nutty story Sumangali, which quite by accident led me segueing into the bushy tale of director Tim Burton, specially trained million dollar squirrels, and a whole lot of nuts...

"Tim Burton blew millions of pounds on the new 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' movie - training squirrels to crack nuts.

The eccentric director spent a huge amount of the film's budget on the short scene, featuring hundreds of rodents, because he was so determined to recreate the famous "nut scene" from Roald Dahl's classic children's book.

Burton, whose previous movies include 'Batman' and the remake of cult sci-fi movie 'Planet of the Apes', spent six months teaching around 200 squirrels to crack hazelnuts, sort them and then load them on to a conveyor belt.

He said: 'We used actual rodents. From birth, we sent them training school for six months.' "

(http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/entertainment/39732004.htm)

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