London - The cow turns out to have a different tone when talking to each other and when talking to humans.
Researchers from the University of Nottingham and Queen Mary University has spent 10 months to learn how the cattle on a farm in Radcliffe-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire communicate with each other. They also found that cows have two 'call' mother. When the cows that were near their children, they tend to communicate using low-frequency calls. However, they will give a different response in humans.
"They did respond to us differently. If they have someone who will feed them and then people are different, they will respond differently. There is a reciprocal relationship there," said Martin Howlett, a farmer from Callington, Cornwall, as quoted from the Metro.
Meanwhile, Dr. Monica Padilla de la Torre as the head of the study stated that "the study shows for the first time that the cattle calls between parent and child is done individually. The acoustic analysis also revealed that certain information submitted in the call of the calf; age, but not sex. "
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