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Cockatoo research: This is how clever (and cheeky) the birds are

Anika Schulz
12/8/2025
Translation: machine translated

Cockatoos are not only fascinating to look at. They are also inventive and have the groove in their blood, as researchers have discovered. An overview.

If you're in the parrot bubble, you've probably seen the funny videos of dancing cockatoos on Tiktok or YouTube. For everyone else, you can see here how a yellow-crested cockatoo called Snowball grooves to Michael Jackson.

30 dance moves

Balzritual or just for fun?

I can also observe that my cockatiels, which are small cockatoos from an ornithological point of view, like to dance. Although their movements are not as pronounced as those of their larger siblings, the males in particular - Rio, Cookie and Finni - dance a lot. Even when there is no desirable female around. I guess they just enjoy it and express their good humour in this way.

But cockatoos don't just have cool moves. They are also inventive when it comes to getting water and food

They crack water dispensers ...

In Sydney, cockatoos are to birds what pigeons and sparrows are to us: the common bird population. They roam the city in groups and live off what they find. And apparently the birds are picky: instead of drinking from puddles, they prefer fresh tap water. One group of cockatoos was observed drawing water from a water dispenser intended for humans. The whole thing looks like this on the YouTube channel of New Scientist:

... and rubbish bins

This video from Science News impressively shows how clever the animals are at it.

Why do cockatoos do this? Well, you probably like pizza better than grain food, don't you? Joking aside. Cockatoos love savoury food. And maybe that also explains their great thirst for fresh water.

Header image: Shutterstock

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As a child, I was socialised with Mario Kart on SNES before ending up in journalism after graduating from high school. As a team leader at Galaxus, I'm responsible for news. I'm also a trekkie and an engineer.


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