The study found that the overall size of the dodo's brain in relation to its body size was on par with its closest living relatives: pigeons - birds whose ability to be trained implies they are no dummies.
The dodo (Raphus cucullatus) was a large, flightless bird that lived on the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, where they were last seen alive in 1662.
When sailors discovered the island in the late 1500s, the dodo did not fear these new arrivals. That led to the birds being herded onto passing boats as an easy meal for passing sailors.
"Today, they are almost exclusively known for becoming extinct, and I think that's why we've given them this reputation of being dumb," said Gold.
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Though the bird has become iconic in popular culture, most aspects of the dodo's biology are still unknown, partly because specimens are extremely rare, researchers said.
To examine the brain of the dodo, Gold tracked down a well-preserved skull from the collections of London's Natural History Museum and imaged it there with high-resolution computed tomography (CT) scanning, which can produce images of the brain inferred from the shape of the skull.
The results found that the dodo's brain was about average for its body size.
"So if you take brain size as a proxy for intelligence, dodos probably had a similar intelligence level to pigeons," said Gold, also an instructor at the Stony Brook University.
"Of course, there's more to intelligence than just overall brain size, but this gives us a basic measure," Gold said.
The study found that both the dodo and the Rodrigues solitaire had large and differentiated olfactory bulbs, an unusual trait in birds, which depend on sight and thus usually have more heavily developed optical lobes.
The researchers suggest that because dodos and solitaires were ground-dwellers, they relied on smell to find food, making an oddly large olfactory lobe an asset.
The study was published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.