Animals Like Music Too
Hannah Metzger
The pounding
beat calls out to you from your headphones. This song hits you right to the
core, like the artist knew your entire life story. You find yourself working
harder, faster as if the beat was controlling your every movement, and it might
be. The fact is that music reaches us on such a neurological level that it can
affect our emotions and increase our productivity. I've always wondered if
animals could have reactions similar to humans if stimulated by something like
a series of sounds. That led me to hypothesize that animals would indeed react
to sound, and that playing a series of sounds in the form of music would result
in emotional changes and an increase in production levels, and would then
benefit farmers.
We know that
animals respond to sounds within their own species, the animal kingdom is
filled with a network of calls and responses, it’s when outside noises enter
that network do we enter a grey area. Cows that have just given birth to a
calf, know their calf’s calls from all the other calves, and the calf will be
able to pick out their mother’s distinct call. When the cow and calf hear a
sound, like an unfamiliar vehicle, they either band together to protect their
young, or they flee from the unknown. I talked to a local farmer that has been
a farmer all of his life, and he told me that it was the dynamic of the sound,
the emotion put behind it, and the movements going with the sound, that all
contribute to how the animals react. After a while an animal will begin
associating the noise with an outcome, such as when a pig learns the sounds a
farmer makes when they are about to be fed. Not all noises will result in a
reaction from an animal, and we never know when or how an animal will respond
to an outside noise.
In my pursuit of proving that all
animals have some sort of emotional and physical reaction to music, I came up
with the idea of playing different types of music for egg laying chickens to
see if it would relax them and they would produce more eggs. I played three
different types of music to my bus driver’s chickens in the hope that the
experiment would prove my hypothesis. For the first two days I played classical
music3 and indeed the egg count did increase from fifteen eggs a day
to sixteen and seventeen eggs. The third and fourth days I played jazz4
to them thinking that it would also relax them and increase their egg count,
the outcome that occurred I would have never expected. The chickens lay
fourteen eggs both days, but that wasn’t the weird part; these chickens had
been laying only brown eggs for about two years and nothing in their
environment changed except the introduction of different types of music, but
while playing jazz for them their eggs began to have a purple tint to them that
became more and more apparent. My thought is that the gloomy tone to the jazz
depressed the chickens so much that there was a chemical reaction with the
pigment of the eggs. Finally for the fifth and sixth days I played country/folk
music5 for the chickens, thinking that this music would decrease the
egg count further, if not changing the color once more. Again I was surprised
in the outcome, the chickens lay sixteen and seventeen eggs, like with the
classical music, but the eggs were still a pretty shade of light purple. The
purple tint to the egg shells seems to be permanent, but the chickens are no
worse for wear, if anything they’ve been happier since going through the
ordeal. Now I know that chickens like classical and country/folk music, and
never to play jazz for them because it decreased their productivity and upset
them greatly.6
Some people
say that animals can’t feel emotions because they are too different from
humans. This is an ignorant way of thinking, because anything with a brain has
the capability to emote. Yes humans have the most complex of the brains because
of the sheer amount of neurons and connections, but all brains have the same
basic regions; regions that associate some sounds as safe and others as
dangerous or unknown. It is true that animals may feel fewer emotions than
humans, but according to Charles Darwin, “the first scientist to study animal
emotions systematically,” (Bakoff) there are six universal emotions (emotions
felt by every animal): anger, happiness, sadness, disgust, fear, and surprise.
Yes there are more emotions, however, the complexity of these emotions result
from how many neurons and neuron connections are in the brain. So how does
sound play into this? Emotions are the result of the stimulating of the five
senses: sight, smell, taste, touch, and sound (Leone). This means that a sound
can indeed trigger an emotional reaction.
According to
my experiment and research, my conclusion is that playing music for animals
results in an increase in production and a significant emotional response. It
just goes to show that humans aren’t the only one that music effects. Pay
attention farmers, playing music could increase your profits!
Levitin, Daniel. "Appendix A." This is Your Brain of Music.
New York: Penguin Group Inc, 2006. . Print.
1 “Travelin’
Soldier” Dixie Chicks “Home” 2002 Sony Music Entertainment Inc track three
2 “Let
it Go” Idina Menzel “Frozen Soundtrack” 2013 Walt Disney track five
3
“Great Classics for Reading II” Disc three 2005 HNH Int. Ltd. 2005 Somerset
Entertainment Ltd., Toronto ON
4
UofL “Jamey Aebersold Jazz Studies Program”
5 Dixie
Chicks “Home” 2002 Sony Music Entertainment Inc
6
Since hearing of my experiment, many other farmers that raise egg-laying
chickens have begun playing different types of music for them and I hope to
hear of their results soon.
Bakoff, Marc. "Animal Odd Couples Excerpt: The Emotional
Lives of Animals." Nature.
Nature. Web. 28 May 2014.
<http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/animal-odd-couples/excerpt-the-emotional-lives-of-animals/8005/>.
Leone, Cathrine. "Come to Your Senses." International Interior Design Association.
International Interior Design Association, n.d. Web. 28 May 2014.
<http://www.iida.org/content.cfm/come-to-your-senses>.
Photos
Wolchover, Natalie. Pets Prefer to Pick Their Own Music.
2012. Photograph. Bunny’s BlogWeb. 28 May 2014. <http://bunnyjeancook.blogspot.com/2012/03/pets-prefer-to-pick-their-own-music.html>.
Anita, Rena. Fertile and Table Chicken Eggs for Sale.
N.d. Photograph. 21 Food, Hungary. Web. 28 May 2014.
<http://www.21food.com/products/fertile-and-table-chicken-eggs-for-sale-756377.html>.
Barnig, Marco. Human Brain Parts and Regions.
2013. Photograph. Internet with a BrainWeb. 28 May 2014.
<http://www.web3.lu/human-brain-parts-and-regions/>.
