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No bird-brain … clever rook has much to crow about

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Published Date: 26 May 2009
ROOKS have astonished scientists by proving they can use stones and sticks as tools and can even fashion hooks out of wire to retrieve food.
Researchers studying the large black birds believe they rival even chimpanzees in their ability to use tools.

The rooks, members of the crow family, amazed the researchers by using their beaks to use stones, sticks and wire to get to food.

The scientists even caught them on video bending a piece of wire into a hook to grab a morsel of food that was out of reach inside a tube.

In another experiment, a rook picked up a stone with its beak and put it in a hole to release a trapdoor to get to food. When the diameter of the tube was reduced, the bird chose a smaller stone.

The birds, which were studied in captivity, were able to modify sticks to fetch food and also demonstrated ability to use tools sequentially, by using one tool to retrieve another that was out of reach.

Rooks have never been known to use tools in the wild, but the scientists believe this is because food is so readily available they do not need to put their brains to use in this way.

In contrast, New Caledonian crows, which live on an island in the Pacific, regularly use tools in the wild to retrieve grubs from holes in trees.

Chris Bird, the lead author of the research at the University of Cambridge, said: "This finding is remarkable because rooks do not appear to use tools in the wild, yet they rival habitual tools users, such as chimpanzees and New Caledonian crows, when tested in captivity."

Despite not using tools in the wild, rooks have been known to show other signs of intelligence, such as working in pairs to free food from a dustbin.

Mr Bird added: "Tool use in the wild is generally a consequence of motivation. Rooks don't need to use tools in the wild because they have access to fast food, such as carrion and roadkill and human litter.

"New Caledonian crows don't have the same access to these kind of foods and have to rely on grubs from the trees, so they have the motivation to use tools."

Mr Bird added that crows have particularly large brains, compared with other birds. Only parrots have a similar brain to body size ratio.

As the four birds involved in the study were bred in captivity, the scientists are convinced they used their brains to fathom how to use tools, instead of learning the skills through trial and error.

Dr Nathan Emery, of Queen Mary University of London, who was also involved in the research, said: "We suggest that this is the first unambiguous evidence of animal insight, because the rooks made a hook tool on their first trial and we know that they had no previous experience of making hook tools from wire because the birds were all hand-raised."

Crows feature heavily in folklore. Traditionally, they are said to be able to forecast weather, sense the approach of death and even escort the souls of the dead to heaven.

The results of the study are published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.



The full article contains 551 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 26/05/2009 01:51:11

Clever Maybe!, but looks quite evel!

2

im brian and so is my wife,

edinburgh 26/05/2009 06:57:11
more brains than a labour MP
3

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 26/05/2009 08:08:34
Could do with a few of them for Westminster but don't let them near the Green Book!
4

sam the god,

26/05/2009 08:12:56
aye right the easiest of the corvid family to shoot
5

Nellie,

Liverpool 26/05/2009 11:29:33
I had the "pleasure" of looking after a Crow for a few weeks while it was rehabilitating. The bird collected pebbles and put them in a line. I wondered what would happen if I moved one of the stones; so I did, balancing it on a perch. I got the most dirty look I have ever had from a bird! The Crow climbed up to the perch, took hold of the stone, brought it down and put it back from where I had taken it. I repeated this several times and the Crow collected the stone and put it back in its place every time. Fascinating! But I couldn't figure out what the significance of the pebbles were for the Crow.
6

Nellie,

Liverpool 26/05/2009 11:32:56
I have watched Rooks play a "drop the stick" game. Anyone seen this? They take a stick and fly high with it. They then drop the stick and plummet after it to catch it before it hits the ground. The game is even more fun when one Rook drops the stick and two birds compete to catch it.
7

Nellie,

Liverpool 26/05/2009 12:09:48
I forgot to say, the "drop the stick" game seemed to be one of "chicken", too - i.e. the stick had to be grabbed at the last moment, so the Rook didn't crash! I didn't once find a Rook with a broken neck in a wood but I don't know if it died playing that particular game.
8

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

26/05/2009 13:16:38
It's the beginning of the end for us. They'll be making nuclear weapons next. Then it'll be R x Everything.
9

Mèths,

26/05/2009 13:17:30
Not as clever as snowball though.
10

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

26/05/2009 13:17:34
#5: I think your crow had OCD.
11

Mèths,

26/05/2009 13:18:46
Snowball and Queen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJOZp2ZftCw
12

Gordon Smiths 364,

Edinburgh 03/09/2009 07:43:14
If these crows were bred in captivity, and shown how to bend the wire time and again, then they would just do it parrot fashion after that.
13

Gordon Smiths 364,

Edinburgh 03/09/2009 07:50:38
Crows are always "robin" food off of the bird table in my garden, "wren" I "thrushed at them they "rook" no notice of me the little "starlings",

 

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