animal-behavior
Animal behavior encompasses the observable actions and patterns of animals in their environment, including movement, feeding, and reproduction. In plant science, animal behavior is fundamental to understanding plant reproduction and ecosystem function, as many plants depend on animals for pollination and seed dispersal. Additionally, animal-plant interactions drive coevolutionary dynamics, shaping plant defense mechanisms, chemical ecology, and survival strategies.
open_in_new WikipediaPubMed · 2026-02-14
This study found no evidence that calves learn better relationships with humans by observing their foster cows being gently handled. The foster cows showed little enjoyment during interactions, preventing any positive relationship transmission to offspring.
No effect of observing gentle cow-handler interactions on calf avoidance distance at 3 weeks or 6 months of age
Foster cows displayed minimal behavioral signs of enjoyment (neck stretching, ear hanging) during handling sessions
Direct learning effects may have masked treatment differences; vertical social transmission of animal-human relationships did not occur