WHEN IT COMES ON IQ,IS IT MORE IN HUMAN OR ANIMALS ?ANIMALS DO SCHOKED US WITH THEIR IQ

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We are not the only intelligent beings on the earth; other species have advanced past us in tasks like identifying human disease and memory tests. Actually, we’re a long way off. Using typical classroom intelligence as the standard to gauge an animal’s mental prowess, humans have a tendency to think of ourselves as the most intelligent species on Earth, however these exams only scratch the surface. For instance, dolphins are born with sonar technology, but we may develop it to monitor an adversary submarine.
Like humans, all animals are capable of independent cognition and decision-making. Therefore, even if some animals have brains that are much smaller or much larger than ours, all creatures are clever and distinctive in their own ways.
1. Honey Badger is a superb escape artist; it is amazing how he outwits people.

I was aware of the intelligence of honey badgers, but this is out of hand. Meet Stoffel, the honey badger Houdini. In every cage that he is placed in at the Moholoholo Wildlife Rehabilitation Center in South Africa, Stoffel successfully eludes his rescuers.
I looked into the reasons why Stoffel was initially living in an enclosure since I know the subject would be raised. He seemed to be so desperate to be let free! It turns out that a local farmer reared Stoffel by hand. Stoffel had been imprinted by humans since the farmer had engaged (and fed) him at such a young age. Unfortunately, this meant that intelligent Stoffel could not survive in the wild without risk. At the rehab facility, Stoffel was first given free reign to wander, but he was frequently killing other animals, including adult tawny eagles and even bunnies! As a result, Stoffel had to be kept apart from the other animals at Moholoholo Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre.
2. Following a spectacular escape, “Cha Cha” the chimpanzee takes cops on a joyous dance.
After being shot with a tranquillizer arrow, a chimpanzee that had escaped from a zoo in northern Japan scaled a tall power pole and then fell from the wires into a blanket being held by a dozen employees.
When the chimpanzee vanished from Sendai’s Yagiyama Zoological Park, it was missing for about two hours. Chacha was perched on a pole, bellowing angrily at the zookeepers below. The chimpanzee was wounded in the rear with an arrow by a worker on a cherry picker, sending it scurrying up the cables. As the sedative started to take effect, Chacha, who was holding onto an electric line, appeared to lose its grasp and abruptly plunged head first into the blanket.

3. The stubborn escape of Inky the octopus exposes an intelligent, soulful creature.

Inky the octopus successfully escaped from his tank in the middle of the night and made his way to the Pacific Ocean. The National Aquarium in Napier, a seaside city on New Zealand’s North Island, had its lid slightly ajar when the male octopus managed to push himself out. He was able to slide over the floor of the tank and crawl his way into a drainage pipe that was 150 mm in diameter and went to the neighbouring ocean. He found it pretty enticing to jump out and make his way across the floor because the lid had been left just a little bit ajar. He was able to go to one of the drain tunnels that lead back to the water before making his escape without even leaving us a note.

04. Meet Ken, the most renowned (and hairiest) escape artist in the San Diego Zoo.
At the San Diego zoo safari area in 1985, a cheeky Bornean orangutan by the name of Ken Allen called the place home. Over time, he rose to fame as a hero and was admired for his cunning in becoming into a frequent escape artist. Since he was a youngster, he had been breaking out of his cage every night to explore the nursery and then re-screwing the bolts in the morning before the zookeepers arrived. He also enjoyed mockingly unscrewing whatever lightbulbs he could reach On June 13th, a 250 lb. orangutan climbed up and out of his display, causing his first escape. Along with other people, Allen crossed the walkway and peeked into the cages of the other zoo animals. Naturally, staff members immediately apprehended him and returned him to his cage
Zookeepers increased the security of his confinement as a result. In an effort to foil another escape, the wall encircling his open space, which included a playpen and a sizable moat, was elevated by four feet. That, however, did not take place. Ken Allen eluded capture once more a few weeks later. The Hairy Houdini made his way to his adversary this time to, as they say, flex. Otis was a different orangutan who Allen hated. They used to share a pen, but on that particular day, zookeepers discovered Allen hitting Otis with pebbles.

Things just kept happening, as if by fate, allowing him to get out of his prison. He discovered a crowbar that had been abandoned in his enclosure by negligent zoo staff in August. Vicki, a female orangutan who lives nearby, received it from Allen and used it to pry open a window to allow him escape. He was then transferred to a different, safer prison after this.

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