Gallery: How to Have Fun Like Monkeys, Whales and Foxes
01beluga-whale
If you want to know how song changes the shape of a finch's brain, science can help. If you want to know how learning a song alters genetic patterns, affects mate choice and ultimately influences populations, you can learn that too. But what if you want to know how a singing bird feels? That, it turns out, is a scientifically uncertain and even controversial question. It's difficult to study animal emotions with formal rigor, and the notion that animals might have rich inner lives was disregarded for much of the 20th century. From the behaviorist perspective pioneered by psychologists like Ivan Pavlov and B.F. Skinner, thinking animals had complex emotions was an unjustified assumption. But from another perspective, it's as much an assumption to think animals *don't* have feelings. After all, humans are animals, too, and whether big brains and language are needed to experience happiness and sadness is unknown. [](http://stag-komodo.wired.com/images_blogs/wiredscience/2011/06/exultant_ark.jpg)Read more from Jonathan Balcombe about the inner life of animals in [an exclusive excerpt from the new book *Exultant Ark*](http://stag-komodo.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/06/exultant-ark-excerpt/)."The onus of proof to show otherwise should be on those who deny that animals have these capacities," says scholar and animal advocate Jonathan Balcombe, author of [*The Exultant Ark: A Pictorial Tour of Animal Pleasure*](http://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520260245). In the book, published in May by the University of California Press, Balcombe surveys a new generation of studies into animal feelings, especially animal pleasure. Accompanying the scholarship are photographs of animals seeming to enjoy themselves: hippos and flying foxes, zebrafish and sharks, parrots and polar bears, a whole animal kingdom of pleasure. (And, yes, there are kittens too.) Balcombe talked with Wired.com and took us on a photographic tour. __Wired.com__: You write that "existing evidence, and common sense, supports the conclusion that all vertebrate animals are sentient," capable of feeling pain and pleasure, and of having experiences. "Common sense" is a red flag, though. Isn't that just another term for gut feeling, or even superstition? __Jonathan Balcombe:__ Pleasure is a private experience, well nigh impossible to prove, though of course scientists don't like the word "prove." And there are good reasons for being skeptical of making assumptions that are difficult to prove. But what I'm getting at is everyday experience: the capacity to be empathic in viewing other animals' experiences and comparing them to our own. Nobody denies that other humans are sentient, though it's no more possible to prove another human being is sentient than it is to prove an animal's sentience. We don't accept such solipsism. It would be far-fetched. So let's stop drawing this line between humans and all other animals. We accept, as we should, that we're sentient. Given that as a baseline, we know that sentience and consciousness have evolved. We might talk about where to draw the line taxonomically, but I find it really objectionable when scientists use the solipsist crutch to leave animals outside the circle of moral concern, which is the implication of all this. __Wired.com:__ But humans can score high on tests designed to measure aspects of sentience. Many animals don't. __Balcombe:__ Well, humans designed the tests. We sometimes struggle to put ourselves in the place of another animal. But the science has advanced. I really enjoy the ingenuity of scientists testing [optimism and pessimism in starlings](http://www.journals.elsevierhealth.com/periodicals/applan/article/S0168-1591%2807%2900084-6/abstract), [episodic memory in scrub jays and meadow voles](http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1088530/pdf/TB011483.pdf), joy in rats. These are rigorous studies. But we shouldn't assume that because an animal does poorly on a test, it doesn't have self-recognition or a [theory of mind](http://cogweb.ucla.edu/CogSci/ToMM.html). It's quite likely we've done a poorly designed experiment. For a long time, people thought chimpanzees weren't good at recognizing faces. Then someone had the bright idea of testing chimps on other chimps' faces, rather than our own. __Wired.com:__ I think many people would acknowledge the existence of animal pleasure, but that's arguably a very simple experience compared to subjective states like happiness or fulfillment. How can you compare those? __Balcombe:__: I can think of a few studies to address that. One, of starlings, concluded that these birds become optimistic or pessimistic based on living conditions. Another showed bereavement in baboons. Pessimism and optimism and bereavement are not fleeting feelings. Studies like these show that animals' emotional states are not just a series of snapshots. They are beings who have long-term emotional states. Granted, I've only mentioned baboons and starlings, but there you've got a mammalian representative and an avian one. I'd say that's preliminary evidence that many other kinds of birds and mammals are capable. __Wired.com:__ But how do you know these feelings are truly felt? Couldn't it be like what [some researchers have claimed of fish](http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/270/1520/1115) — that they have a physiological response to pain, but don't actually feel it? __Balcombe:__ That's the challenge. How do you get a starling to tell you that he or she truly feels pessimistic? I agree that birds being less likely to flip a lid on a box containing an ambiguous outcome doesn't necessarily mean they're feeling pessimistic, but it's what you might expect if they were. __Wired.com:__ How should these insights be applied? __Balcombe:__ The capacity to feel pleasure and pain have large implications. Pleasure is a huge part of sentience, and sentience is the bedrock of ethics. We have a moral code because others have life that matters. If you want to call others "humans," fine: Humans can suffer, they have interests, things can matter to them. But now we're extending that beyond humans. We have to factor that into the calculus. __Wired.com__: But wouldn't we need to factor feelings into how we judge animal interaction? I recognize the sentience of the mice outside, and also the sentience of the fox. And the fox eats the mouse. __Balcombe:__ I don't perceive that the fox has much choice about what he or she gets to eat. Maybe that's an exemption the fox has. Perhaps the fox isn't a moral agent, and cannot reflect on questions of right or wrong. Though that's an interesting frontier in animal behavior: Can animals show virtue, distinguish good from bad acts? It's controversial. But we can make choices. Maybe that's the burden of being a moral species, of being so intellectual. Intelligence comes with duties. That's where the rubber meets the road, where the science of animal pleasure and sentience meets with how we ought to treat animals. __Above:__ Beluga Whale ------------ Dolphins and beluga whales have been seen blowing bubble rings and swimming through them. "It appears to happen much more commonly in captivity," said Balcombe. "That may shed light on why they do it: to relieve boredom. Another theory is that it's play. Those aren't mutually exclusive. My gut feeling is that it's stimulating for them. If you don't see it in the wild, that suggests it's one of the games they come up with in captivity." *Image: Hiroya Minakuchi/Minden Pictures*
02barbary-macaque
Barbary Macaque --------------- "Some macaques show an intense fascination with water — its appearance, its movements, and its feel," writes Balcombe. Like a child playing in a puddle, "the attention of this Barbary macaque was held completely for several minutes as she repeatedly splashed, apparently enchanted with the feel of the water and the consequence of the action." *Image: Andrew Forsyth*
03hoary-marmot
Hoary Marmot ------------ A hoary marmot that wandered through a patch of plants in Washington's Mount Rainier National Park, sniffing each flower. Perhaps he was investigating each flower's edibility, though from another perspective he might have been savoring his next meal. "We're gourmands. Are other animals gourmands? I don't know. But I could cite a study of iguana that would leave a warm perch and venture into a refrigerated area to get lettuce, which they presumably consider a treat, even though they had chow right below their perch," said Balcombe. "We could argue that variety is adaptive for nutritional reasons, but the chow had everything they needed. Another explanation is that they wanted a change, something different. We should be guarded before we assume that we're the only gourmands in the world." *Image: Nate Chappell*
04american-pika
American Pika ------------- This mountain-dwelling pika is gathering food that will be stored for consumption during cold winter months. It's a hard task, yet studies show that rodents, given the choice, will opt to forage rather than eating the same food from a proffered dish. "We like projects. Animals like their projects as well," said Balcombe. "Why do big cats pace in a zoo cage? It's not like they'll die if they don't. They do it because they're highly motivated to move around. Just because something is a survival behavior, a very serious thing that needs to be done, doesn't mean there's no reward. Because it's crucial, it's probably rewarding." *Image: Bill Meikle*
05chimpanzees
Chimpanzees ----------- These chimpanzees, named Teresa and Sheila, live in the [Chimp Haven sanctuary](http://www.chimphaven.org/), where lifelong care is provided for chimps abandoned as pets or rescued from medical research. As with so many animals, including humans, mutual grooming is important for chimpanzee communication and conflict resolution. Asked about observations of less-salutary behaviors in chimpanzees, including cruelty, Balcombe said, "I believe that for nonhuman mammals with the largest, most complex brains — dolphins, whales, great apes — the argument can be made that they show virtuous behavior, and bad behavior. They may have a moral code, and they may be capable of behaving badly." *Image: Amy Fultz/Chimp Haven*
06common-blue-butterflies
Common Blue Butterflies ----------------------- As with many other members of their taxonomic order, mating among common blue butterflies involves surprisingly complex displays of courtship. This is presumably unaccompanied by feelings, "but my general doctrine is to give insects the benefit of the doubt," said Balcombe. "I think that there's more to lose by treating insects badly when they're sentient than by treating them well when they're not. And quite aside from whether they're sentient, they're part of the biotic matter out there. They're beautiful, they're alive." *Image: Arthur Sevestre*
07barnacle-geese
Barnacle Geese -------------- Barnacle geese are among the animal world's few practitioners of monogamy and lifelong mate unions. What might it be like to be part of a goose couple? Balcombe deferred to the insights of [Konrad Lorenz](https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Konrad_Lorenz), a Nobel Prize-winning zoologist who studied geese. "He was convinced, not by any repeated scientific study, but by anecdotes based on living among geese for decades, that they fell in love with each other," Balcombe said. "We know that many geese do mate for life, and have a single partner. Evolution should guarantee that they have strong bonds." *Image: Jonathan Lhoir*
08oystercatchers
Oystercatchers -------------- Non-monogamous animals may have less reason than lifelong mates to develop strong emotional bonds, but that doesn't mean they're incapable of doing so. Studies of starlings suggest emotional attachments between parents and offspring, said Balcombe. "What is attachment? That's a safe, old term that's been used for decades. But what do we mean by it? It's an emotional magnet. I think these birds can feel that." *Image: Ken Archer*
09norway-rats
Norway Rats ----------- Scientists have found that Norway rats emit two telltale chirps, one at 22 kHz and the other at 50 kHz, said Balcombe. The latter is made while wrestling, playing and having sex. They also make the chirps when being tickled, as if they were laughing. "I find that pretty compelling, though some scientists don't like it. They suggest that it's not laughter, but the movement of the rats' rib cage against their lungs," Balcombe said. "I feel it emerges very robustly that these animals are experiencing a positive, joyous kind of response." *Image: Brandy Saxton*
10elk
Elk --- Writes Balcombe in *Exultant Ark*, "A young bull elk engages in an act of playful curiosity commonly performed by young children — sticking out a tongue to catch snowflakes." *Image: Mark Peters*
11swift-fox
Swift Fox --------- "I did not choose this photo because it expresses pleasure. Indeed, how are we to know what this fox is feeling as he bounds across a field?" writes Balcombe. "I chose it because it expresses a fundamental value: freedom." *Image: Thomas D. Mangelsen*
12gray-seal
Gray Seal --------- Balcombe often finishes public lectures with this photograph of a gray seal, peering out from a wave as if from behind a curtain. "Seals have large, dark, somewhat human-like eyes, and that makes them all the more compelling," Balcombe said. "It speaks to me of the perspective of another individual." *Image: Arthur Sevestre*
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