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clock-iconPUBLISHEDFebruary 11, 2025
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Some Cockatoos Love Condiments, Though Their Flavor Combos Are Questionable

Blueberry yogurt + pasta = delicious, apparently.

Holly Large headshot

Holly Large

Holly Large headshot

Holly Large

Copy Editor & Staff Writer

Holly has a degree in Medical Biochemistry from the University of Leicester. Her scientific interests include genomics, personalized medicine, and bioethics.

Copy Editor & Staff Writer

Holly has a degree in Medical Biochemistry from the University of Leicester. Her scientific interests include genomics, personalized medicine, and bioethics.View full profile

Holly has a degree in Medical Biochemistry from the University of Leicester. Her scientific interests include genomics, personalized medicine, and bioethics.

View full profile
EditedbyFrancesca Benson
Francesca Benson headshot

Francesca Benson

Copy Editor and Staff Writer

Francesca has an MSci in Biochemistry from the University of Birmingham.

A Goffin's cockatoo (a small white bird) rolling a piece of pasta around in a dish filled with blueberry yoghurt (left); the same cockatoo holding the yoghurt covered pasta in its claw and eating it (right)

Would you try blueberry yogurt covered pasta?

Image credit: Messerli Forschungsinstitut/Vetmeduni; modified by IFLScience


Can you not bear to eat fries without smothering them in ketchup? Perhaps you like to dip yours in a Wendy’s Frosty. Well, it turns out this kind of behavior doesn’t seem to be exclusive to humans – a new study has found some Goffin’s cockatoos (Cacatua goffiniana) love a condiment too.

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The idea for the study came about by chance; on a November morning in 2022, researchers at the Goffin lab at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, noticed two of the birds dunking their breakfast of cooked potato into some blueberry-flavored soy yogurt.

Previously, the lab had discovered that some cockatoos like their snacks soggy, soaking dry rusk in water probably to change its texture – similar to how some humans enjoy dunking a cheeky biscuit or three into a cup of tea.

Goffin's cockatoo, a white bird, looking over a metal dish filled with water and a piece of rusk
Patiently awaiting the perfect level of sog.
Image credit: Messerli Forschungsinstitut/Vetmeduni

What was the reason for dunking in yogurt this time around? Perhaps it was for flavor, the researchers theorized, though there was only one existing observational study from the 1960s that suggested animals liked to add flavor to their food, and that was in Japanese macaques.

To find out more, the team observed 18 cockatoos from the lab eating breakfast on another 14 occasions, during which the birds were presented with their food bowl and three dunking options: fresh water, blueberry soy yogurt, and neutral soy yogurt as a control.

Their observations revealed that nine out of the 18 cockatoos dunked their food into yogurt. “Not all cockatoos in our group, however, showed this dipping of their food,” said study co-author Jeroen Zewald in a statement. “That probably means this is a new invention by the cockatoos that is not part of their normal behaviour.”

The birds also never dunked their food into water, which ruled out that they were doing it for soaking purposes.

On the other hand, there were multiple indicators that they were dipping to add flavor. The birds showed a preference for the blueberry yogurt over the neutral-flavored option, and also only dunked certain foods in it; they weren’t fans of yogurt-coated cauliflower or carrot, for example, but loved rolling a bit of pasta around in it. 

In fact, “they usually started eating the yogurt-covered parts of the food, sometimes even re-dunking it after most yogurt was gone,” the authors note. We’ve all been there – some chips just aren’t the same without the dip.

And so, after eliminating other reasons based on their observations, the researchers concluded that the cockatoos were dunking to add some pizazz to their food.

“Although we normally challenge our cockatoos by giving them a problem and then observing how they solve it, this time the cockatoos showed that they had discovered solutions to problems that we had not even thought of,” said study co-author Alice Auersperg. “Apparently, their food wasn't tasty enough.”

Even though their wild counterparts have not been seen dipping their food in liquids, it’s not necessarily a huge surprise that this behavior has developed in the lab’s cockatoos – these birds are super smart.

“These cockatoos are known for using tools in innovative ways in the wild. For example, they make sharp wooden objects from tree branches to open hard-shelled fruits,” explained Auersperg. “These kinds of discoveries in tool use and food preparation show us how flexible, innovative, and curious these animals are.”

The study is published in the journal Current Biology.


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