Wednesday, March 16, 2016

MeadowP current event

Do Dogs know self?

My guess is this title doesn't make too much sense. What does it mean? Its pretty much do they have a sense of self do dogs know themselves apart from others. In this article you will hear about how people have tested dogs to find the answer through just daily life and tests that are done. Do dogs really have a sense of self?  


There were tests conducted to find this out. Scientists used a mirror to test this by putting a dot on an animal's head (including human we are animals to) and showing them themself in the mirror. Most of their subjects passes by touching the dot and that shows they know “thats me in the mirror” but dogs did not the would just think it's another dog or something they should sniff and mark. i just don’t think the mirror is the best example and neither did Roberto Cazzolla who came up with another way to test the dogs. He placed down something the dog who was being tested has urinated on and other things other dogs have.  The dogs were let loose in the area to see how long they spent at each spot. When they simply did a fast sniff and walked by it was showing that they recognized it as them self. They did succeed in this test i believe this shows that they do recognize them self by scent not sight. So i say that dogs do have a sense of self and do know they exist separately from other and know there name as theirs.

My dog has also failed the mirror test not that i was trying to test him but if he looks into a mirror he doesn't know it's him he is afraid of the big dog in the mirror also known as himself. I still doubt him sometimes thought whether or not it's just him he will get suspicious about his own paw prints in the mud. I chose this because i believe they do have a sense of self and that someone questioned it made me curious on what it might be that they doubt and to see if my mind would be changed but i still believe the same. Do you think that dogs have a sense of self?

Friday, March 11, 2016

OliverH Current Events

Corkscrew Killer
3/11/16
Publisher: Liz Devitt
Editor:Oliver Hixon

The scientists Philip Hammond and Andrew Brownlow have tracked a seal that started off in Scotland and ended up in Germany. The seals are not only killing the Harbor Seals but video footage shows an adult Grey Seal killing one of its younglings with a spiral cut around it’s body and then eating it. At first the scientists thought that the cut came from a propeller from a large ship, but later realized that they were wrong. This picture shows a dead Harbor Seal on a table being examined for the spiral cut.

When the scientists took a closer look at the seal cuts they noticed that the cut was a very clean cut and wasn’t jagged like a propeller blade would cut. A quote from a professor “Prior to this, we considered it rare behavior if gray seals ate other seals. We also did not think that it was possible for bite and tear attacks to cause such smooth-edged wound margins.”A part of the text says “‘This shift in specialized predation is still fairly rare,’ says Philip Hammond. He’s a population biologist. He also works at the Sea Mammal Research Unit at St. Andrews University. But he was not involved in studying the corkscrew cases. For him, it’s still unclear how big a source of pup deaths the gray seals are. ‘Propellers,’ he worries, ‘haven’t been completely ruled out.’” I think that seals have a life cycle and if the scientist can get the Harbor Seals migrate to another spot they can safely have a spot where they can start a new life hopefully without having a problem. But the hunt isn’t over there will be quite a bit more time before they figure out what to do with the problem.

I think that the author had good thinking spreading the word because if the word didn’t get out there would probably get worse because nobody knew to help or get help so everything would just disappear and nobody would of knew what happened. I thought this article that I found was interesting over the other articles because if Brownlow and Hammond had just left the situation I think it would lead to some serious problems for seals because if all the Grey seals eat the Harbor Seals there will be no food for the Grey Seals then the Grey Seals with die off etc. It relates to our science because we talked about invasive species for our Brook Trout topic and I thought it would be exactly the same if nobody knew and invasive species can be difficult to deal with so I think this will take a few more years to figure out



Sources: Hixon, Oliver Bruce, ed. "Seals: Catching a ‘corkscrew’ Killer."
    Science News For Kids. Society for Science 2000 - 2016. All rights
    reserved., n.d. Web. 11 Mar. 2016.
    <https://student.societyforscience.org/article/
    seals-catching-%E2%80%98corkscrew%E2%80%99-killer>.
Link:https://student.societyforscience.org/article/seals-catching-%E2%80%98corkscrew%E2%80%99-killer