A parrot named Alex was subject of a 30-year experiment. His last words to his caretaker were: "You be good, see you tomorrow. I love you."
Alex the Parrot's Last Words: 'I Love You'
On September 6, 2007, a grey parrot named Alex said goodnight to Dr. Irene Pepperberg, the researcher who had studied him for three decades. "You be good. See you tomorrow. I love you," he told her—the same phrase he used every night. She responded as always: "I love you, too." He asked, "You'll be in tomorrow?" She said yes.
The next morning, Alex was found dead in his cage. He was only 31 years old, far short of the 45-year average lifespan for grey parrots in captivity. His death from sudden cardiac arrhythmia was completely unexpected.
A Three-Decade Conversation
Alex wasn't just any parrot. He was the centerpiece of a groundbreaking study that began in 1977 when Pepperberg, then a graduate student, bought him at a pet shop. The goal was audacious: prove that birds could do more than mimic human speech—they could actually understand it.
For 30 years, Pepperberg and Alex worked together in what became one of the most famous animal cognition experiments in history. The name "Alex" was actually an acronym: Avian Learning EXperiment.
What Alex Could Do
His abilities stunned the scientific community. Alex could identify 50 different objects, recognize quantities up to six, and distinguish seven colors and five shapes. He understood concepts like "bigger," "smaller," "same," and "different"—abstract thinking that researchers once believed only primates could master.
He didn't just label things. He could answer questions about objects: their color, shape, material, and whether two items were the same or different. When shown a tray of mixed objects, he could count how many were a specific color or shape.
Perhaps most remarkably, Alex seemed to understand the concept of zero. In his final, unpublished experiment, he was learning to distinguish numerical quantities and appeared to grasp that "none" was a number—a cognitive leap that took human children thousands of years to develop mathematically.
More Than a Research Subject
What made Alex's final words so poignant wasn't just their content—it was the relationship they revealed. Pepperberg never claimed Alex loved her in a human sense, but those weren't random words he'd been trained to repeat. He chose when to say them, and to whom.
Alex had a personality. He could be impatient, demanding, and occasionally mischievous. He'd tell other parrots in the lab "You be good" when they made mistakes. He'd request specific foods and refuse to cooperate if he wasn't in the mood. When tired of an experiment, he'd simply say "Wanna go back"—and mean it.
His cognitive abilities suggested that parrots—and perhaps birds in general—had been vastly underestimated. The phrase "bird brain" as an insult became scientifically indefensible.
The Legacy
After Alex's death, Pepperberg continued her research with other grey parrots, including Griffin and Arthur. But Alex remained the most famous, the one who changed how science viewed animal intelligence.
Those final words—"I love you"—weren't just a touching farewell. They were a reminder that intelligence and emotion might be far more widespread in the animal kingdom than we've ever imagined. A bird with a brain the size of a walnut had spent 30 years proving he could think, reason, and perhaps even feel.
Whether Alex understood the permanence of death is unknown. But he understood enough to say goodbye in a way that still resonates nearly two decades later.