Site icon Conservation news

Rooks use tools in captivity rivaling ‘habitual tools users such as chimpanzees’



The rook, a member of the crow family, is the most recent bird to prove the ability to use tools, a capacity once thought to belong only to humans. Although rooks have never been observed using tools in the wild, researchers were astounded at how quickly—sometimes during the first try—rooks were able to employ tools to attain food.


“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,” said Chris Bird, the lead author of the study, published in the Proceeding of the National Academy of Sciences.


During experiments, rooks quickly learned to drop a stone to collapse a platform, which, when released, provided them with a piece of food. The rooks chose the right size and shape of the stone without any training. The birds were also able to use and fashion sticks to accomplish the same task.


Further tests showed that the rooks could deftly use a hook tool to obtain food, and when the tool provided was straight instead of hooked the rooks would bend it correctly to reach the food. The brainy birds were also able to use tools sequentially by employing one tool to obtain the correct tool for a task.


“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,” said Dr Nathan Emery, Queen Mary University of London, in whose lab these experiments were performed.


Since it was known that the subject rooks had not employed tools in the past, the researchers theorize that their capacity for tool use may be due to sophisticated physical intelligence, rather than having evolved as an adaptive specialization, i.e. specific traits evolved to fit their environment, which is the explanation scientists have given to the tool use shown by New Caledonian crows.















Related articles



Birds can dance, proving humans aren’t the only ones with rhythm


(04/30/2009) Another ability long-thought to belong solely to humans, like tool-use or counting, does in fact occur in other species, according to two new studies. In this case, it is the capacity to move rhythmically with music. Studying two different birds the research groups found that the birds weren’t just moving randomly or mimicking owners, but actually changing the tempo of their movement to match the music—in other words, dancing.

Stop staring at me: birds react to human gaze

(04/06/2009) A new study of jackdaws shows that these crow-like birds react to humans watching them, changing their behavior depending on who is looking and how the gaze moves.

When the magpie looks in a mirror, it sees itself

(08/20/2008) Unlike Narcissus of Greek mythology–who upon seeing his reflection in water jumped in thinking it was another–magpies have proven they can recognize their own reflections. Until now, only a small number of primates (chimpanzees, pygmy chimps, and orangutans) have displayed this ability, making the magpie the first bird shown to recognize itself.

Exit mobile version