Are humans the only animal that wipes things off?
Are humans the only animal that wipes things off?
I know the title is poorly worded but I can't really think of how exactly to word the question.
I was watching a cat try to find a place to sit that wasn't covered in snow and it made me think about how humans wipe off snow covered seats or just dirty seats in general.
Is that a uniquely human thing or are there other animals that exhibit similar behaviors?
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Racoons clean their food.
116 0 ReplyIs that why that video of the raccoon losing cotton candy in a stream exists?
82 0 ReplyThanks. I’m sad again.
45 0 ReplyHe was given more cotton candy and eventually figured out that it can't go in water and ate some dry.
37 0 ReplyThis story had better be true Mister!
15 0 Replyawww!
9 0 Reply
Racoon sure got that share https://piped.video/watch?v=eesxH2-8Jlo
7 0 Reply
Yes
34 0 Reply
Literal translation of the Norwegian word for raccoon is Wasing-Bear
33 0 ReplyThe German word for raccoon is Waschbär
23 0 ReplySame in Japanese. araiguma translates as washing bear.
18 0 ReplyOn the contrary, in French it is raton-laveur, which translates to washing baby rat.
21 0 ReplyFrench is clearly more correct than German here. They are rats not bears
9 0 ReplySince they belong to the super family musteloidea, Wash Weasel seems more accurate. Definitely still closer to bears than rodents though.
5 0 Reply
It makes sense. How else could you be a chef if you didn’t have opposable thumbs
6 0 Reply
Tvättbjörn
2 0 Reply
They don't clean it, at least that's not their intention. They don't have saliva, so they're really just trying to get it wet.
It's more like those hot dog eating contests where they dunk the whole thing in water.
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