view the rest of the comments
Otters
The only place on the internet where you can go to, the ONE PLACE for all your otter needs, otterly awful otter puns, and adorable images of the finest the Lutrinae family has to offer.
/c/otters posting rules:
-
NO links to merchandise / spam. T-shirts that you think are cool sans purchase links are fine. Do not ask how or where to purchase goods as we might just assume you're affiliated with the poster. Both users may receive bans!
-
NO pets or otter cafés! Otters should be wild or at least under the care of an accredited zoo or a certified wildlife rehabilitation center. For context as to why, please see: Wild otters popular poached as exotic pets NO links to youtube channels promoting pets. These will be removed. See Here for more on this.
-
BE NICE This is a nice sublemmy for enjoying cute animals, a respite from other more serious subs. Politics, religion, or inflammatory comments will be removed & users may receive bans.
Here are some other communities you might be interested in
* c/GifsOfOtters
* c/mustelids
* c/ferrets
* c/redpandas
* [c/foxes](https://lemmy.ml/c/foxes)
* c/badgers
* c/ottermerchandise
Honest semi related question. How far down in the kingdom goes personal recognition of self? Does the squirrel see its reflection and think, "mmmhm, slay gurl," or is that high order dolphin/elephant stuff?
Mirror Test
Yooooooo! Thanks!
I think scientists try to figure this out all the time, that's why we see headlines about dogs or dolphins or octopuses (octopodes?) being as smart as toddlers. We used to think pigs were dumb, but now we know they are quite intelligent. So I don't think there is a definitive answer to your question yet.
I'm a lot more intrigued to know how far down the evolutionary tree the squirrels start screaming "YAAAAAAAASSSSS"