Nikola Chavkosk
Well-Known Member
I have asking myself, whether a tiger looking at you standing in front of his enclosure in a zoo, knows that if there was no a fence, he will have a chance to attack you or ''play'' with you? Or in other words, thinks in advance that ''you are lucky because the fence protects you from me attacking you''. 
From what I have read, and seen in several zoos, I would rank according to intelligence, the next groups of zoo animals:
(Most intelligent >> to less intelligent in general):
-Apes
-Cockatoos, African gray parrot
-Cebids (New World monkeys)
-Old world monkeys and gibbons
-Elephants
-Crows
-California sea lion or sea mammals in general
-Amazon parrots
-Hornbills
-Macaws, toucans
-Foxes, jackal, small carnivorous mammals, lemurs
-Spotted hyena
-Leopards
What would be most intelligent reptiles, will you agree that:
-Komodo dragons,
-Crocodiles, and,
-King cobra, black mamba & coastal (and Papuan) taipan - are one of the most intelligent reptiles?

I have also realised that marsupials are one of the least intelligent mammals, and not able to form a human-animal bond like that that can be formed between most mammals and humans. Koalas have exceptionally small brain floating in large amount of cerebrospinal fluid - a possible adaptation via cushioning from eventual drop from the trees.
From what I have read, and seen in several zoos, I would rank according to intelligence, the next groups of zoo animals:
(Most intelligent >> to less intelligent in general):
-Apes
-Cockatoos, African gray parrot
-Cebids (New World monkeys)
-Old world monkeys and gibbons
-Elephants
-Crows
-California sea lion or sea mammals in general
-Amazon parrots
-Hornbills
-Macaws, toucans
-Foxes, jackal, small carnivorous mammals, lemurs
-Spotted hyena
-Leopards
What would be most intelligent reptiles, will you agree that:
-Komodo dragons,
-Crocodiles, and,
-King cobra, black mamba & coastal (and Papuan) taipan - are one of the most intelligent reptiles?
I have also realised that marsupials are one of the least intelligent mammals, and not able to form a human-animal bond like that that can be formed between most mammals and humans. Koalas have exceptionally small brain floating in large amount of cerebrospinal fluid - a possible adaptation via cushioning from eventual drop from the trees.
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