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Crows are as intelligent as apes
The researchers devised some very difficult tasks for the crows. It's remarkable that these creatures found and executed the right sequence of steps to solve the problems facing them.
This is the entire article.
5:00AM Friday August 17, 2007An Auckland (New Zealand) University study has found New Caledonian crows are as intelligent as apes when it comes to foraging for food. Photo / Reuters
Researchers placed the crows in a situation where they were required to carry out a sequence of tasks using tools to get food.
The crows had to first use a short stick to extract a longer stick from a barred box, which could in turn be used to extract out-of-reach food from a hole.
The study suggested that the birds solved the task by reasoning rather than using trial and error or previous learning, according to the research published in this month's Current Biology journal.
"Tool use is a major turning point in species evolution," said one of the researchers, Professor Russell Gray, a psychologist.
"New Caledonian crows have, quite surprisingly, exhibited intelligence at the same level as the best performances by great apes on such a difficult problem."
Great apes such as chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and bonobos are regarded as the most intelligent primates after humans.
Professor Gray said crows had often been portrayed in folklore as crafty, cunning creatures, but in the past few years there had been a growing appreciation in the scientific community that there might be a scientific basis to these tales.
"Crows' abilities might reflect a mix of learning appropriate procedures and more complex cognition."
Professor Gray and biologist Dr Gavin Hunt were given $630,000 in taxpayer funding in 2002 to check out whether New Caledonian crows could pass on their food foraging skills to other crows.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 14:24 on August 16th, 2007
Tom van B, thanks for posting this. It doesn't surprise me that crows are intelligent--scavenging animals have to acquire creative methods for dealing with the challenging of their environments. In many ways apes and humans are also built for scavenging and have developed similar creative methods for dealing with its challenges.
Doubt the human link to scavenging? Just go to the mall, or watch someone try to get food out of a vending machine. :)
at 04:54 on August 17th, 2007
There are some unique aspects of New Zealands Geography that would make it more likely to see this here. There are no native mamals in NZ and most enviornmental niches are filled by Parrots. This includes the infamous Kea. Known to rip windscreens out of cars to get at food. I cant upload vids from youtube here for some reason so here are some Kea links. These birds are what the crows have to compete with and are the Parrot equivelant of a crow;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KvFPNxkIJc (Attack car)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BzvonkpwOpk (spanish Doco crew test Kea inteligence AMAZIN)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMLpPoOeays (Destroy car tyre)
at 05:31 on August 17th, 2007
I've seen videos of problem-solving crows. This does not surprise me.
at 08:29 on August 17th, 2007
Tom van B, to wander a little off point, I'm always amazed at how clever and resourceful, in general, animals in the wild can be. One year, I watched a bird begin it's nest, using grass, twigs and the like. At some point, the bird retrieved a discarded cassette tape, (not from my home, by the way!), and completed the nest, discarding all previous materials!
And the squirrels! I have placed numerous plastic peanut butter jars, with lids screwed on, into my recycle can. On a number of occasions, I've looked out my window to see a squirrel wrestling with the lid on the jar! It is a regular task for me to inspect the yard and gather up the jars and their lids, separately, and put them back in the can. Of course, the jars have been licked clean!
at 09:08 on August 17th, 2007
Tom van B, good stuff, makes you wnder how many other animals are more intelligent than we might think
at 09:56 on August 17th, 2007
INdeed, good stuff. Crows, and their cousins, the ravens, are very smart. There's a reason why many Native American tribes see Crow, or Raven, as messengers.
Then there's the mockingbirds, real jet pilot warriors. I've seen mockingbirds with nests nearby strafe my cats. This summer, one was strafing my German Shepherd. The mockingbird would fly down and peck at her hips in one big swoop of beating wings when the bird wanted my dog to move along out of one area of the yard.