Study Finds Bird Masturbation Across 120 Species, Urges Vets to Avoid Harmful Interventions
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 1
Study Finds Bird Masturbation Across 120 Species, Urges Vets to Avoid Harmful Interventions
3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 1
Summary
Data from 120 bird species found masturbation is widespread and more common in the wild than in captivity, undercutting the idea that it is mainly a stress response.
The Ecology and Evolution study says the behavior is a normal part of birds’ sexual repertoire and generally not harmful, with parrots, ducks, turkeys and chickens among the species documented.
Researchers warned that some owners seek treatment and some vets advise stopping the behavior by removing perches or toys, avoiding certain touch, or in extreme cases using hormones or surgery.
Dr Chloe Heys and co-author Dr Matilda Brindle said vets should reassure owners unless a chronic medical problem such as prolapse is involved, arguing the findings have major welfare implications.