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Jan 25, 2026 08:31 PM
Probably happens more often than we think among animals, but the oddball member of a group just dies off without its eccentricity being passed on. If cattle were primates, they might imitate an individual among them engaging in unique or anomalous behavior, so that the latter would spread and be maintained over generations in the herd. But apparently "aping" is just not in them.
While there are plenty of species that do mimic other species in various ways (camouflage, calls, etc), it seems to be an inherited tendency or capacity, rather learned. Not some kind of opportunistic attention roving in a social species obsessed with hierarchal status, like: "What's that weirdo in our bunch doing over there? I'll do the same thing to mock him/her. Hey, that results in something interesting..."