Wed. Jul 23rd, 2025

Many animals have a sense of quantity, but they don’t count or do math the way humans do.

๐Ÿง  Numerosity: The Animal Sense of Quantity

Across the animal kingdom, many species โ€” from bees and frogs to lions and birds โ€” can distinguish between quantities. This isn’t โ€œcountingโ€ in the human sense, but it’s an ability known as approximate number sense (ANS).

  • Honeybees count landmarks to navigate to flowers.
  • Spiders monitor how many insects are in their webs.
  • Frogs engage in “chuck” contests โ€” adding calls to outdo rivals.
  • Lionesses gauge rival group size by counting roars.
  • Carrion crows can vocalize specific numbers of caws in response to cues (up to four).

This intuitive ability helps animals survive: more food, more allies, fewer enemies.


๐Ÿ”ข How Animal Number Sense Works

The ANS isnโ€™t about specific numbers like โ€œ3โ€ or โ€œ7.โ€ Instead, itโ€™s about estimating and comparing.

  • Distance effect: Itโ€™s easier to tell apart 4 vs. 8 than 6 vs. 8.
  • Size effect: Itโ€™s easier to tell 2 vs. 4 than 12 vs. 14 โ€” even though both pairs differ by two.
  • These patterns follow Weberโ€™s law: quantity differences are perceived by ratios, not exact amounts.

Even newly hatched chicks show these number instincts, suggesting ANS is innate, not learned.


๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿซ True Counting: A Human (and Rare Animal) Skill

Only a few exceptional animals have come close to actual counting:

  • Alex the African grey parrot: Identified numerals (1โ€“8), added small quantities.
  • Chimps Sheba and Ai: Recognized symbols for numbers, placed them in order.

True counting requires:

  • Recognizing numerals as symbols.
  • Understanding their exact value.
  • Knowing their order and applying them across contexts.

This kind of symbolic reasoning takes humans years to develop โ€” and is rare even among intelligent nonhumans.


โž• Can Animals Do Math?

A handful of species can perform basic arithmetic under controlled experiments.

  • Parrots, pigeons, chimps, stingrays, honeybees, and cichlid fish have shown the ability to:
    • Add or subtract one or two
    • Use color-coded or symbol-based cues to solve simple problems (e.g., โ€œblue = add 1โ€)

But:

  • These skills apply only to small numbers
  • Complex operations (like long division or algebra)? No evidence yet.

๐Ÿงฎ So, Can Animals Do Math?

โœ… Estimate quantities
โœ… Use number sense
โœ… Add/subtract small numbers (some)
โŒ Count like humans
โŒ Do complex math

As psychologist Michael Beran puts it: animals donโ€™t “count” in the way we think โ€” but they understand โ€œmoreโ€ vs. โ€œlessโ€, and some can even perform simple math-like tasks with the right training.


๐ŸŒ Why It Matters

Understanding animal math helps us:

  • Learn about evolution of cognition
  • Improve animal training and welfare
  • Rethink how we define intelligence

And maybe, just maybe, respect our fellow creatures a little more.

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