Elephants are the most outstanding. The male elephant headed by him is as old as death, digging up the soil on the ground with ivory, rolling up clods with his nose and throwing them at the dead elephant. Then the elephants followed suit and soon buried the dead elephant. Then, the male elephant stepped on the soil with all the elephants, and soon the "elephant tomb" was built. At this time, the male elephant shouted, and the baby elephants walked slowly around the "elephant tomb" to show "mourning".
Monkeys, monkeys have deeper feelings. After the old monkey died, the monkeys all cried around it, then dug a hole and buried it together. They left the dead monkey's tail outside and watched the movement quietly. If a gust of wind blows the tail of a dead monkey, the monkeys will happily dig out the dead monkey to see if it can still live. No reaction when you see a dead monkey. Bury it again.
Cranes are very emotional birds. Cranes living in the marshes of North America will hover over the dead bodies for a long time every time they find their dead counterparts. Then, the leader flew to the ground with a large group of people, turned around silently, and sadly "paid tribute" to the body of the deceased. However, Siberian cranes maintain different funeral forms. They stopped in front of the body and gave a miserable cry. Suddenly, the leader gave a long cry and everyone was silent. In their eyes, they seem to shed tears for you, hanging their heads one by one, as if they were attending a solemn "memorial service."
The crow is in the deep mountains. A group of crows lined up in an arc on the hillside, with a dead crow lying in the middle. A crow, headed by an elephant, stood by and croaked as if reading a "eulogy". After the cry, two crows flew over, picked up the dead crow and sent it to a nearby pond. Finally, the crows, led by the leader, collectively flew over the pond, groaned and circled several times, as if to say goodbye to the "corpse", and then dispersed separately.
Badger A badger in Africa chose "water burial". If a badger finds the same kind of body, it will invite his companions to join hands to drag the body to a nearby river. Then, the sad badger stood by the river, looked at the raging river and groaned.
Wild goat The wild goat on the Australian grassland was very sad when he saw the bodies of the same kind. They angrily rammed the trunk with their horns, making it roar. This is similar to the human "raising a gun to mourn."
In the forest of the Amazon river basin, there is a petite wenbird, and its funeral may be the most civilized in the animal world. They brought green leaves, berries and colorful petals and sprinkled them on the bodies of the same kind to express their condolences.
At present, zoologists cannot explain the emotional phenomena of these animals. Many experts try to explore this mystery from the perspective of sociology.