#1 They Can Count Up To Five

Chicken communication is not at all primitive. Those who have observed these birds closely, know that chickens can be just as deceptive and cunning as humans when they need to.
#2 They Understand That An Object That Moves Out Of Sight Still Exists

While chicken communication can be vocal, they also have a wide array of visual displays and body language to communicate a range of information. By using sophisticated signals, they convey their intentions, all while taking into account their prior experiences and knowledge.
#3 They Have All Descended From The Red Jungle Fowl

Chickens are flock birds and they have a complex social hierarchical structure. Each chicken has a specific social status, recognized by the other members of the flock.
#4 The Color Of Chicken Eggs Usually Coincides With The Color Of Their Earlobes

The social dynamics and their orders influence many activities, such as feeding, drinking, egg-laying, mating, roosting and dust-bathing. The dominant chickens usually have primary access to food, shelter, and mates.
#5 They Are Able To Recognize Up To 30 Other Individual Chickens

In the study conducted in 2015, Lisel O'Dqyer together with Susan Hazel ran a class for undergraduate students at the University of Adelaide in Australia. The students performed experiments that involved training chickens. Before the class, students had to fill out a questionnaire in which the majority of them said that they had spent little time with chickens. They viewed them as simple animals, who aren't very likely to feel boredom, frustration or happiness. Two hours after training the chickens, students filled out the questionnaire again and this time, they were far more likely to say that the chickens can experience all three of the emotional states.
#6 They Have A Preference For Attractive Human Faces

Some studies suggest that chickens can appreciate and envision how the world must appear to their counterparts and that they can use this information for their own advantage.
#7 There Are More Chickens On This Earth Than There Are Humans

Much of what we know about chickens is largely based on agricultural research which skews the results, as the industry tends to think about the animals in terms of their "productivity".
#8 They Appear To Have A Basic Understanding Of Physics

In a relaxed environment, when their defenses are lowered, chickens play games (like hide and seek) and can sometimes even release a sound very similar to a cat's purring.
#9 Roosters Perform A Little Dance Called ‘Tidbitting’

"The perception of chickens [as unaware and unintelligent] is driven in part by the motivation to dismiss their intelligence and sensibilities because people eat them," says Lori Marino, an author of The Inconvenient Truth About Thinking Chickens.
#10 Many Archaeologists Believe That Chickens Were First Domesticated Not For Eating But For Cockfighting


