From United Poultry Concerns <[email protected]>
Subject [UPC] Chickens are Courageous Birds. They are NOT Cowards, or a Trope for Human Cowardice
Date November 10, 2019 10:41 PM
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United Poultry Concerns - [link removed]
10 November 2019

Chickens are Courageous Birds. They are NOT Cowards, or a Trope for Human Cowardice

By Karen Davis, PhD, President, United Poultry Concerns

In August I posted Chickens Are NOT Cannibals. A post coauthored by Carol Adams
and Marc Bekoff on October 28, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi Didn't Die Like a Dog, has
inspired me to say further that chickens are not cowards, either. Chickens are
not "chicken." Therefore, they cannot be invoked as a metaphor for human
cowardice except as an ironic or uninformed cliche.

Chickens Are NOT Cannibals:
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Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi Didn't Die Like a Dog:
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Donald Trump asserted on October 27 that the head of ISIS "died like a dog. He
died like a coward." Adams and Bekoff point out that Abu Baur al-Baghdadi did
not "die like a dog." However he may have died, dogs do not generally die, or
for that matter live, like cowards. Chickens don't, either.


Bravery of Chickens

The call of the wild is in the chicken's heart, too. Far from being "chicken,"
roosters and hens are legendary for bravery. In classical times, the bearing of
the rooster symbolized military valor: his crest stood for the soldier's helmet
and his spurs stood for the sword (Smith and Daniel, 66). A chicken will stand
up to an adult human being.1 Our tiny bantam rooster, Bantu, would flash out of
the bushes and repeatedly attack our legs, his body tense, his eyes riveted on
our shins, lest we should threaten his beloved hens.

An annoyed hen will confront a pesky young rooster with her hackles raised, and
run him off! Though chickens will fight fiercely and successfully with foxes and
eagles to protect their family, with humans such bravery usually does not win. A
woman employed on a breeder farm in Maryland wrote a letter to the newspaper,
berating the defenders of chickens for trying to make her lose her job,
threatening her ability to support herself and her daughter (Sadler).

For her, "breeder" hens were "mean" birds who "peck your arm when you are trying
to collect the eggs." In her defense of her life and her daughter's life against
the champions of chickens, she failed to see the comparison between her motherly
protection of her child and the captive hen's courageous effort to protect her
own children.

In an outdoor chicken flock, ritual and playful sparring and chasing normally
suffice to maintain peace and resolve disputes without actual bloodshed. Even
hens occasionally have a go at each other, but in 35 years of keeping chickens,
I have never seen a hen-fight, with its ritualized postures and gestures, turn
seriously violent or last for more than a few minutes. Chickens have a natural
sense of order and learn quickly from each other. An exasperated bird will
either move away from the offender or else aim a peck, or a pecking gesture
(I've seen this many times) that sends a message - "lay off" or "back off!"

Bloody battles, as when a new bird is introduced into an established flock, are
rare, short-lived, and usually affect the comb (the crest on top of a chicken's
head), which, being packed with blood vessels, can make an injury look worse
than it is. It's when chickens are crowded, confined, bored, or forced to
compete at a feeder that distempered behavior can erupt. However, chickens
allowed to grow up in successive generations unconfined do not evince a rigid
"pecking order" (Smith and Daniel, 165-166, 316). Parents oversee their young,
and the young contend playfully, among many other activities. A flock of
well-acquainted adults is an amiable social group.

Sometimes chickens run away; however, fleeing from a bully or a hereditary
predator-species on legs designed for the purpose does not constitute cowardice.


Cayman Chickens. Photo by Davida G. Breier

Scientists Cite Courage in Roosters and Hens, But "No Serious Fights"

In a field study of feral chickens on a coral island northeast of Queensland,
Australia in the 1960s, G. McBride and his colleagues recorded the birds' social
and parental behavior over the course of a year. Here is how they describe the
birds' response to a perceived threat to their chicks.

When a hen with very young chicks was disturbed by a man, she gave a full
display and the alarm cackle. When pressed closely, she hid her chicks by
regularly turning and making a short charge at her pursuer. As she turned, she
pushed one or two of her chicks into a hollow, while giving a particularly loud
squawk among her clucks.

Once the chicks were all safely hidden, the hen raised an alarm call that was
echoed by the distant roosters who came to her. In the following scene, we see
the rooster with his hens and their young:

When the group moves, the rooster gathers the hens together before moving. The
hens keep contact with him while moving, and he controls their movement when
crossing open ground. When disturbed, he gives the alarm call and walks parallel
to the predator or potential predator while the hens quietly hide.

When the flock was disturbed, the roosters were observed to drive the hens away,
by rushing toward them with their wings spread. While the hens foraged, the
roosters spent the majority of their time on guard in their tail-up, wing-down
alert posture. Roosters used the broody hen display when charging: tail fanned,
wings down, feathers puffed.

Occasionally, roosters from other territories joined the flock, but according to
the investigators, "No serious fights were observed during any of these
intrusions, though the males made several rushes at each other" (35). Typically,
the "trespassing territorial males left after a contest involving crowing,
display and territorial tidbitting."2 In the non-breeding season, the areas
became overlapping territories in which all of the birds and their progeny
mingled. The only real fight the investigators ever saw among roosters took
place in a pen, and this fight, which for one bird was fatal, they attribute to
"the restriction of movements in the pen, as well as to the inability of a
defeated bird to escape by flying into a tree" (158).


Notes

1. Despite our no chick-hatching policy at United Poultry Concerns, in May 2019,
a rooster and a hen we adopted from a cockfighting raid in 2018 sneaked a family
into our sanctuary consisting of five baby chicks. Being so tiny at first, these
chicks were able to squeeze through the wire fence where they got stuck on the
other side. They peeped frantically to their mother hen, and she responded
frantically to their cries, unable to reach them. (We quickly fixed the
problem.) When this first happened, I rushed over to the mother hen in the
wooded area of our predator-proof sanctuary where the chicks had been born, and
where she was panicking. Quick as could be, she leaped into the air and struck
my face with her claws, seeing me in these circumstances as a threat to her
endangered family. &#8209; Karen Davis

2. What is "tidbitting"? A mother hen will pick up a tasty seed or bug and drop
it at her chicks' feet to show them it is good to eat. A rooster will do the
same for his favorite hen, often including a courtly dance around her. Some
roosters will tidbit in a pretense of eating, when what they are really doing is
fixing their eye intently on someone they seek to intimidate or mislead, to
control and perhaps attack if provoked. Occasionally I and visitors to our
sanctuary have been the objects of this riveting tidbitting performance in a
rooster set on protecting his turf. &#8209; Karen Davis



References

Adams, Carol J., and Marc Bekoff. "Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi Didn't Die Like a Dog."
Psychology Today, Oct. 28, 2019.
[link removed]


Davis, Karen. "Chickens are NOT Cannibals." United Poultry Concerns,
Aug. 28, 2019.
[link removed]


McBride, G. [Glen], et al. "The Social Organization and Behaviour of the Feral
Domestic Fowl." Animal Behaviour Monographs Vol. 2, Part 3: 125-181, 1969.
[link removed]

Available on Amazon:
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Sadler, Cathy. Letter. The Daily Times (Salisbury, MD), Aug. 27, 1991.


Smith, Page, and Charles Daniel. The Chicken Book: Being an Inquiry into the
Rise and Fall, Use and Abuse, Triumph and Tragedy of Gallus Domesticus.
Boston: Little, Brown, 1975.
[link removed]
See Karen Davis's Review of The Chicken Book:
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KAREN DAVIS, PhD is the President and Founder of United Poultry Concerns, a
nonprofit organization that promotes the compassionate and respectful treatment
of domestic fowl including a sanctuary for chickens in Virginia. Inducted into
the National Animal Rights Hall of Fame for Outstanding Contributions to Animal
Liberation, Karen is the author of numerous books, essays, articles and
campaigns. Her latest book is For the Birds: From Exploitation to Liberation:
Essays on Chickens, Turkeys, and Other Domesticated Fowl (Lantern Books, 2019).

Amazon Reviews Praise
FOR THE BIRDS: FROM EXPLOITATION TO LIBERATION
by Karen Davis, PhD
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Order Now!
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--
United Poultry Concerns is a nonprofit organization that promotes
the compassionate and respectful treatment of domestic fowl.
Don't just switch from beef to chicken. Go Vegan.
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