The abstract:

Monkey communication expert Robert Seyfarth began his lecture on May 5, the kick-off of the University of Delaware's Year of Darwin celebration, with a true story, documented in 1961, about a female baboon that herded goats in an African village.
The baboon knew all of the relationships between the goats so well that at night she would carry a bleating kid from one barn directly to its mother in another barn.

“For all the centuries we've bred dogs, no dog has exhibited this knowledge of kids and mothers,” said Seyfarth, who is a psychology professor at the University of Pennsylvania. “The question is where does this mind come from?"

My processing of the abstract:

"Considered in its full biological reality, love--that is to say affinity of being with being--is not peculiar to man. It is general property of all life and as such it embraces, in its varieties and degrees, all the forms successively adopted by organized matter." —Teilhard de Chardin, The Phenomenon of Man