Sheep have a great sense of smell, and have
special scent glands located in front of their eyes and between the digits of their
hooves to help them out! Mothers learn to identify their babies by their unique
scent. Our Jacob Sheep were at one time taken from their mothers. We reunited them
and guess what? They all found their moms in a matter of seconds. The moms knew too!
Sheep have a great sense of smell, and have
special scent glands located in front of their eyes and between the digits of their
hooves to help them out! Mothers learn to identify their babies by their unique
scent.
Sheep also have a great sense of taste, and
can even use this sense to discriminate between plants and substances for the
purpose of self-medication! This is an example of a behavior called
Zoopharmacognosy, where non-human animals seek out plants, insects, certain types of
soil and other things to medicate themselves for ailments like stomach upset and
high parasite loads!
Sheep have amazing peripheral vision. Their
field of vision is nearly 360 degrees! They cannot see directly behind them, but
otherwise have a very impressive visual range, especially when their head is lowered
to graze!
Sheep have a nifty little split in their
upper lip to help them choose the plants they consume! You know what they don’t have
though? Front teeth in their upper jaw!
Sheep memories are also pretty great. They
can recognize up to 50 sheep faces and remember them for two years!
Turn that frown upside down! Sheep can
distinguish between a smile and a frown on human faces, and prefer smiles much like
us.
Sheep are quite clever! They can navigate
mazes and have been found to use their excellent memory to memorize how to get
through them quickly!