Will caged munia recognize its owner?
The caged munia will recognize its owner. The munia is very smart, with the IQ of a 5 or 6-year-old child. It has self-awareness and can sense who is good to it and who is bad to it, so it can recognize its owner. Caging and free-range basically have no impact on the recognition of the owner. The only impact is on the character of the bird and the skills it learns. Of course, it must be caged in the early stages of raising.
How to train a munia to recognize its owner
1. It is best to raise a munia from an early age, because the adult munia will have an impact on its behavior after passing by its previous owner. Character, if the previous owner was not good to it, it will make it resist accepting the owner. As for the munia that has been raised since childhood, as long as the owner is patient, early feeding can make it recognize its owner in about a week.
2. Munnia is extremely wild and must be kept in a cage in the early stage. Of course, it may show resistance, such as bumping into the cage, refusing to eat, etc. The owner must put it in a quiet environment, do not disturb it and let it adapt on its own.
3. The owner must interact with it frequently so that it can become familiar with the owner and remember the owner, so that it can easily recognize the owner.
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