I don’t know how many animals I’ve encountered on home removals that are obviously disturbed by the death of their owner.  It’s a phenomena that we funeral directors get to witness on a rather consistent basis … the dog that won’t leave their owners side … the cat that’s perched on the death bed … the gerbil that … errr … yeah, mostly dogs and sometimes cats.

Most of the articles that I’ve read or pictures that I’ve seen on the interweb of animal funerals have been disproved by a quick trip to Snopes.  But here’s a more thorough article that I tend (want) to believe:

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According to a US ornithologist, scrub jays take part in a bizarre ritual in which it appears that they hold a funeral for their dead.

Teresa Iglesias and her colleagues at the University of California, Davis, have found that when western scrub jays encounter a dead bird they adopt different behavior patterns and take part in a unique ritual.

On encountering a dead bird, jays call out to one another and stop their normal behavior of flying or foraging. Once the message has been sent out, the jays fly down to the dead body and begin to gather around it.

BBC Nature says it’s less likely the assembly resembles any form of acknowledgement of the passing of a dead bird and more likely it’s a symbolic behavior designed to warn other birds there may be a threat nearby.

Scientists have tested out the ritual of the jays by placing various objects in areas where jays are known to congregate, including the backyards of many American homes. The objects ranged from wood, models of predators, and dead jays. Most of the objects were ignored, except for the dead jays, where the signalling behavior was initiated. The ritual then proceeded to last for up to one day.

The western scrub jay (Aphelocoma californica) is a species of scrub jay native to western North America. The bird is approximately 11.5 inches in length (including its tail), with a 15-inch wingspan. The jay has a blue head, wings, and tail, a gray-brown back, and grayish underparts. The throat is whitish with a blue necklace.

A study and analysis of the jay ritual has been published in the journal Animal Behavior, in a paper titled ‘Western scrub-jay funerals: cacophonous aggregations in response to dead conspecifics’.

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