Crows hold 'funerals' — they gather around their dead and investigate the cause of death
When crows encounter a dead crow, they gather in large, loud groups around the body — a behaviour researchers call a 'crow funeral'. Scientists at the University of Washington studied this and found it serves a survival function: crows use the gathering to learn what killed the dead bird, avoiding similar threats. They'll mob any predator near a crow corpse, even if they've never seen that predator before. The behaviour is social threat assessment, not mourning — but the functional outcome resembles a funeral: community gathering, information sharing, predator identification.
The word 'funeral' implies emotion and ritual. Crows don't mourn in a human sense, but their response to death is sophisticated collective intelligence that achieves similar social functions — knowledge transfer about danger, community response to threat.
“Crows hold 'funerals' around their dead — they gather in groups to learn what killed the crow and identify the danger. It's collective threat intelligence. Same function, different emotion. 🐦⬛ #OddlyHuman”