Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (2024)

DW: I have an aquarium with piranhas at home. Recently, when one of them died, the other six behaved quite strangely. They were unusually calm and refused to eat. Were they grieving for their companion?

Frans de Waal: I don't think so. Piranhas also take bites out of each other; I don't think they are very friendly with each other. In general, grieving is unlikely in fish - unless you have individually bonded fish which might be possible in some species.

Why were they behaving so weird then?

There is something called Schreckstoff - it is a substance that fish release when they are distressed. It is possible that your fish were just influenced by whatever happened to the other fish, in a more physiological way.

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (1)

What is the difference to 'real' grieving?

Typical grieving happens with mothers and offspring in mammals. Usually, you find grieving with animals who have individual attachments, not just schooling or flying together, but having friends. All mammals have these bonds to some degree, all birds as well, as birds are very often pair-bonded. If the partner dies, they are very affected by it.

What if an animal's companion belongs to a different species? These stories of dogs who mourn for their owner - is that only wishful thinking?

No, I think that is an absolutely true thing. There was the dog Hachiko in Tokyo in Japan. After his boss died, the dog came to the train with which he normally arrived - for about 10 years. Whenever you have attachments, be it between a dog and a human or a cat and a human, you can have grieving.

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (2)

Do animals mourn like humans do when their companions die?

'Mourn like humans do' is a big statement. They are distressed. With primates like chimpanzees, it is not unusual that if one of the primates in a group dies the others stop eating for a couple of days. They become completely silent, they stare at the body for a long time, they try to revive the body. That is typically human - we don't do that anymore but in the old days people did that.

So grieving in animals lasts for a few days?

If it is a very important partner like your best friend or your offspring then it can last much longer, it may last for years. I knew a female who lost an offspring and for months was sort of crying about it. It has a very long-term effect.

How do we know that those animals mourn? Maybe they just got out of their routine because something is missing in their life?

I remember a story where a baboon mother lost her baby to a predator. Weeks later she came back to the same area where she had lost her offspring and she climbed into a high tree and started calling. That gives an indication that she remembered what had happened there and that she was missing her offspring. With primates we often have the impression that they specifically remember the individual.

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (3)

Do you think they realize that their companion will never come back?

The one thing about death that primates certainly understand is the permanency. That once an individual is dead, they don't move anymore, they're dead. I think they understand that.

How do you know?

I'll tell you an anecdote about it. Some bonobos found a very dangerous snake in the forest and were very scared of it, poking it with sticks. At some point, the alpha female, which is dominant over the male, took the snake by the tail, hit it against the ground and killed it. From that moment on, the young bonobos picked up the snake, hung it around their necks, walked around with and started to play with it.

That indicates that they know that it's a dangerous animal that you should be very careful of - but once it is dead, you can play with it. So I think they understand that death is a permanent condition.

Do apes also realize that they themselves have to die some day?

It is hard for us to know but there is no indication that they have this kind of understanding.

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (4)

Do other species like birds mourn in the same ways as primates do?

Some birds who mate for life sometimes even stop eating and die if their partner dies. This is true for geese but also for many songbirds, they have long-term bonds.

Which animals do you think mourn the most strikingly?

I would say elephants, because they go back to the bones of the ones that they have lost. If an elephant dies - and at the moment with poaching that is a typical occurrence - the other elephants inspect the bones of the dead elephant if they can find them. I'm not sure, though, if anyone has done research on whether the elephants return just to any bones or bones of specific individuals that they have known. But that would be my guess. They go back to the bones, a bit like us going to a graveyard.

Do some animals also bury their dead by digging a grave?

No, they don't dig a grave. It is possible that they throw stuff over their dead in order to cover the body. That appears to be like an anti-predator defense, in a sense that a smelling body would attract predators and scavengers. But I don't know if they do that systematically.

Digging a grave is a typically human thing then?

Yes, that's for sure. Recently, there was the discovery of hom*o naledi, a human ancestor. The team claimed that they buried their dead which is a true indication of humanity. Even though there are a lot of doubts about that claim now, actually.

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (5)

Does it help the cause of conservation to know that animals mourn?

Everything we realize about animals in terms of their emotional lives or death cognition helps - in a sense that it makes the animals more complex or human-like and more attractive to people. All this knowledge contributes to the way we look at animals and may change the way we look at the treatment of animals. It has ethical implications, so to speak.

Frans de Waal is a Dutch primatologist and ethologist. He is professor of Primate Behavior in the Emory University psychology department in Atlanta, US, and director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center. He works mostly with chimpanzees and bonobos and is author of several books including "Chimpanzee Politics" and "Our Inner Ape."

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016 (2024)

FAQs

Do animals mourn their dead? – DW – 09/21/2016? ›

There are also cases of animals grieving for members of other species. Take, for example, "Muschi" the cat and "Mäuschen" the Asiatic black bear. The pair became inseparable at Berlin Zoo - and when the bear died, the cat refused to leave her companion's enclosure. She stayed there, meowing mournfully.

Do animals mourn their dead? ›

When a family member, human or animal, is lost, becomes ill, or dies, it affects the whole family. Effectively supporting the grief process in the surviving pack members allows the pack to move forward. Animals display grief in a manner similar to humans. Aspects of their personality may change for a period time.

Do animals know you're grieving? ›

Although animal behavior experts don't fully understand how it happens, it is apparent that when you are grieving, your dog can pick up body language cues and smells that your family members and friends often don't recognize or ignore.

Which animal dies after their partner dies? ›

The swan. The swan will ocassionally drop itself through a forked branch to commit suicide either breaking it's neck or strangling if it has been mated for a long time and loses it's mate. They have also been seen to drown themselves, that was captured on camera once. It isn't common with younger love however.

What do animals do with their dead? ›

Scientists have observed bonobos pounding the chests of their dead, elephants lingering by the bodies of deceased herdmates, and cats and dogs refusing food when a fellow pet dies. Other mammals also appear to grieve the loss of loved ones. Whales are known to carry around deceased calves after they die.

Do animals cry in grief? ›

Elephants do grieve, and they are one of the few animals who are similar to humans in mourning patterns. Believe it or not, elephants cry. They bury their dead and pay tribute to the bodies and to the bones.

Which animal knows its own death? ›

There is, however, a second, less-demanding sense in which, say, a monkey might have an awareness of its own mortality. This is the notion, not that it will die, but that it can die. That is,… the idea that this is something that could happen to it, but not inevitably so.

Can animals sense someone dying? ›

No animal has been proven to predict death, but many dogs will show behaviors that indicate an understanding of the situation. We've all heard at least one heartbreaking story of a dog that refused to leave the side of their dying owner.

Do cats care if you cry? ›

Cats can form strong bonds with their owners, and part of that attachment includes the ability to recognize and respond to human emotions. Cats are sensitive to our moods and can tell the difference between emotional cues, such as crying.

How long does animal grief last? ›

The grieving process happens only gradually.

It can't be forced or hurried—and there is no “normal” timetable for grieving. Some people start to feel better in weeks or months. For others, the grieving process is measured in years.

What animal symbolizes the death of a loved one? ›

Certain animals such as crows, cats, owls, moths, vultures and bats are associated with death; some because they feed on carrion, others because they are nocturnal. Along with death, vultures can also represent transformation and renewal.

Which animal dies after baby born? ›

Octopus. Scorpions are one of the few animals that die after giving birth. During this period, the female may stop feeding and eventually die, providing nutrients to her offspring through cannibalistic feeding.

What animal is the happiest? ›

The quokka is often called the happiest animal in the world. They live in Western Australia and always look like they are smiling.

Which animals hold funerals? ›

Crows have also been observed to have their own funeral like behaviors. Researcher Kaeli Swift puts it plainly, “Crows are one of the handful of other animals including elephants, primates, dolphins, when exposed to a dead member of their own species respond in a way that is easy to describe as a human-like funeral.”

What animals can cry? ›

'In the sense of producing emotional tears, we are the only species,' he says. All mammals make distress calls, like when an offspring is separated from its mother, but only humans cry, he says.

Why do we never see dead bodies of monkeys? ›

Not as a rule, but it has been generally seen that monkeys do grief their dead. Like many other species, they generally leave them at places where they are not easy to be noticed and cover them up with branches, trees, stones or mud.

Do animals get sad when their mate dies? ›

Thanks to the advancement in the study and understanding of animal behaviours, we are now seeing behaviours that we interpret as grief, in animals that experience the loss of others they've bonded with. Grief, it appears, is just one of the many emotions that animals share with us humans.

How long do animals grieve? ›

Just like with humans, there is no finite period for grief, as every animal responds differently to a loss. Many experts suggest that animal grief will run its course in weeks to months, but studies of other species of animals recognized grief in closely bonded wild animal communities that lasted for years.

What animals have funerals for their dead? ›

Crows have also been observed to have their own funeral like behaviors. Researcher Kaeli Swift puts it plainly, “Crows are one of the handful of other animals including elephants, primates, dolphins, when exposed to a dead member of their own species respond in a way that is easy to describe as a human-like funeral.”

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