Miquel Llorente
Head of the Department of Psychology at the University of Girona, associate professor Serra Húnter and principal investigator of the Comparative Minds research group
This article strikes me as being of outstanding quality and represents a real breath of fresh air in the study of animal cognition. Most notably, the authors have not confined themselves to describing an anecdote, but have tested the animal in a controlled and systematic manner. By presenting the tool in random orientations, they were able to demonstrate that the cow, Veronika, was not acting through mechanical repetition, but with a clear and functional intention.
Until now, tool use has been considered a rather exclusive club, largely restricted to primates (especially great apes, but also macaques and capuchin monkeys), certain birds such as corvids and parrots, and marine mammals like dolphins. Finding it in a cow is a fascinating example of convergent evolution: intelligence emerges as a response to similar problems, regardless of how different the animal’s “design” may be.
The real novelty here is not merely the use of an object, but its flexible and multifunctional use. Veronika discriminates which part of the tool (bristles or handle) is more appropriate depending on the sensitivity of the area of her body she intends to scratch—something that, outside humans, has only been documented with such clarity in chimpanzees. This is all the more remarkable when we consider her anatomical constraints: lacking hands or a trunk, she must make very fine adjustments in grip and anticipation using only her mouth.
As for limitations, caution is warranted: this is a single-individual study, and we cannot generalise that all cows possess this capacity innately. Ontogeny and Veronika’s individual history are crucial here. She is a cow with a long life, raised in an enriched environment and with constant human contact—factors that have likely allowed a cognitive capacity to flourish that would remain entirely latent in intensively housed or industrially farmed cattle.
This work opens up a new frontier in science: the study of cognition in ungulates, a group historically neglected due to our utilitarian bias towards them. It compels us to rethink the ecological and cognitive demands of these animals and has direct implications for their welfare. If they possess this kind of mental potential, environmental enrichment on farms should not be a luxury, but an ethical necessity for their proper care and management.