Xtine66 Smmedal2

Tags  →  corvids

(PhysOrg.com) -- New Zealand scientists studying New Caledonian crows have found they can use three different tools in succession to gain a food treat. The crows are known to solve problems and fashion and use tools in the wild, but their clevernes and innovation in the experiments astounded the researchers.

Investigations into the abilities of the New Caledonian crow (Corvus moneduloides) revealed the birds can create tools out of unfamiliar materials, and they can also use several tools in succession. The scientists, led by Professor Russell Gray from the University of Auckland, captured seven wild crows and placed them in an aviary where they were presented with a complex problem in which meat was placed out of reach. It could be drawn out by a long stick, but the stick was out of reach inside a barred toolbox. The long stick could be retrieved using a short stick, but this was attached to a string tied to a branch. So to win the treat, the birds had to first pull up the string to retrieve the short stick, then use the short stick to pull out the long stick, and then use the long stick to draw out the meat.

The crows were split into two groups. Birds in the first group were allowed to try out every step in the problem before being presented with the complete task. All the birds in this group succeeded in the multi-stage task on their first attempt.

Birds in the second group were shown situations in which food was attached to a string and where sticks could be used to reach food, but they had never experienced a situation in which one tool was used to collect another. Even so, the birds in this group also succeeded in reaching the food in the multi-stage task, although two of them took three or four attempts before they succeeded. One of the birds (nicknamed Sam) spent the first 110 seconds simply inspecting the parts of the task, and then completed it the first time without error. Another (Casper) found the string puzzling, but also completed the task on the first attempt. ...


Ta much, dear MSiegel

Yup, that's Tippi Hedren allright.

Wonder if this photograph was made before or after The Birds' freaky attack scene....and if that's THE script in her lap!
... Chris Bird, a zoologist at the University of Cambridge and the lead researcher, said: “Rooks are rivalling habitual tools users such as chimpanzees and New Caledonian crows [famed for their tool dexterity] when tested in captivity.

“When I saw them making hooks I had to rein in in my enthusiasm in case they saw it and reacted to that, but these are fantastic findings. Birds’ brains are so differently constructed from primates’ it’s amazing that they can carry out similar tasks.” The results of the study are published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. ...



Cor blimey! Stone the crows!