Many animals are as smart as man, or even smarter. Although they seem disguisting or small or not important, this is not who they trually are like.
Ants are as smart as humans. They live together in 'cities' and build tunnels, homes, storage areas, even hospitals! They have a ruler, a queen, and have wars. Some ants even own pets called antlions or aphids. When they pat their 'pets', the pet releases a fluid that ants love. Many other insects are this smart.
Dolphins are also quite clever. They can be trained and kept as unique pets.
Although parrots may talk, they just imitate what people say, and they do not know what they say in human language.
Spiders may be able to build webs, which are complex and hard, but it is just something they known as soon as they are born. Scientist are still trying to explain how they know how.
"Humans, obviously.. then the Monkeys."If by advanced you mean complex then humans have the heaviest and most complex brains relative to their mass, which is what many scientists think is the fundamental useful criterion. Whales have much larger brains but the nature of their intelligence is so different to ours that it's not very meaningful to compare them.
Amongst mammals, monkeys do NOT come next! The great apes outperform monkeys. Our closest rivals are probably bonobos and chimps.
To confuse matters, several recent studies have shown some corvids (crows, rooks, etc) outperforming the apes (for instance in making novel tools to solve tasks.)
There is some evidence that dolphins are roughly our equal in intelligence, with cases known of dolphins experimenting on humans and testing us (though not in the appalling ways that humans experiment on animals so maybe they rank higher than us)
human brains are most complex than the brains of any animal on Earth
The octopus has a main brain and then a smaller brain in each tentacle.
Animals with larger brains tend to be larger than animals with smaller brains. Also, to a degree, larger brains tend to mean more complex behaviors. Yes, some mammals have more brains than humans and have less intelligence, but any mammal is more intelligent than an earthworm which only has some ganglia for a brain.
multicellular organisms
We are not considered animals - we are animals, and our closest relatives are apes.Actually , it depends on your thinking .Chimpanzis are the ancestors of humans ,.And on other side ,Humans Have Developed their brains more than Animals .That's Why they r ruling the world with their Intelligent Minds .
Jellyfish don't have brains Starfish do not have brains. Instead they have a cluster of nerves called ganglia. Being more specific than the person before me, I am doing a science course that basically says that there are some animals(E.g. earth worms, shrimp and starfish) that do not have brains per say but they have clusters of ganglia that make a plexus or plexi (the plural form of plexus) and these act as nerve centers. -Actually, earthworms and shrimp (as do all arthropods) have central brains. However, they also possess a chain of ganglia along their nerve cords. Echinoderms (such as starfish) do not have true brains, instead having nerve nets.
little dogs are more delicate, there brains are smaller than big dogs. big dogs are much dopier than little dogs. their brains are functioned which makes them more clumsy. littler dogs brains help them to be more agile, and help them take in their surroundings!
Animals with larger brains tend to be larger than animals with smaller brains. Also, to a degree, larger brains tend to mean more complex behaviors. Yes, some mammals have more brains than humans and have less intelligence, but any mammal is more intelligent than an earthworm which only has some ganglia for a brain.
It is because of their genes and their species. Some animals have smaller brains than others, there for, some have more abilities and are more curious. By being curious, the animal will be more experienced and be smarter.
Mammalian brains evolved from reptilian brains (simply instinctive), develop feelings and can alter instincts through experience.
Carl Linnaeus was the Swedish botanist and zoologist who believed that the emotions of animals became more complex as the animals themselves became more complex. Linnaeus is one of the fathers of modern ecology and the father of taxonomy.
yes
Animals with cephalization respond more quickly and in more complex ways.
no because older fossile are more primitive animals.
coelomates
yes and i can show you more brains of other animals.
For one, our brains are more developed than animals; we can remember things from when we were very young, where as I doubt a dog will remember when they were a puppy.
One unique characteristic distinguishing animals from members of other kingdoms is animals have more complex and rapid movements. The movement of sponges isn't more complex.
multicellular organisms