Kuwait Times

No fooling crafty crows on best plants for tool-making

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Like master artisans selecting the finest raw materials for their showpiece designs, New Caledonian crows identify the best plants for fashioning hunting hooks from among myriad shrubs in the forest undergrowt­h, researcher­s said yesterday. The notoriousl­y bright birds-one of the few animals apart from humans known to manufactur­e their own tools-use leaves and plant stems to create an array of utensils they then wield to forage for bugs in the ground or prise prey out of deadwood.

“If you imagine these birds live in dry forest, so there’s a lot of paperbark trees, different shrubs and bushes,” said Barbara Klump, research fellow at the Centre for Biological Diversity, University of St Andrews in Scotland, told AFP. “The question is how do they recognize the right material? There are so many options in the forest and they clearly have a specific idea of what they want.” Klump and the team from St Andrews carried out a string of tests on the crows, using types of plant with near-identical leaves native to the Pacific archipelag­o.

Previous studies showed that the crafty crows prefer a particular species of flowering plant, which has a robust but malleable stem that they fashion into hooks. In Klump’s study, published in the journal Royal Society Biology Letters, crows were shown their preferred plant next to a similar-looking one in the lab. Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, the crows knew the difference and frequently opted to approach their preferred material.

In a subsequent test the leaves were removed from both plants and replaced with those of a third plant. But the crows weren’t fooled, once again plumping for their favorite shrub. “The general idea we had is that they would look for the leaves because they are more conspicuou­s and maybe then they would look at the stems as a second step,” said Klump. “They did recognize the leaves, but this really showed us that the stem is the main thing they focus on. They are very picky.”

The crows of New Caledonia-a French territory around 1,500 kilometers (900 miles) east of Australia-have impressed ornitholog­ists for decades with their ingenious use of tools to winkle out hardto-reach prey. While debate persists over whether their skill-set is inherited or “learned” through social interactio­n, Klump said she had no qualms about labeling the birds smart. “They are really well adapted to their environmen­t and they have clearly evolved traits of tool use and picking these specific plantsthat tells us much about how they interact with their environmen­t,” she said. “Clearly, they are intelligen­t in that they can solve a lot of problems.” — AFP

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