nationalgeographic.com Tools
Search at nationalgeographic.com  




Sponsored in part by


Crow Makes Wire Hook to Get Food


Watch a video of the crow making a hook out of wire: Go >>

The New Caledonian crow is one of the few birds that probes for food with twigs, a form of tool use. Now, three Oxford University, England researchers have discovered that one such crow, a captive female, has gone a step further.

To obtain out-of-reach food, the crow repeatedly took a piece of straight wire and bent it to create a hook. According to the researchers, who report their findings in the August 9, 2002 issue of Science, this behavior suggests that New Caledonian crows "rival nonhuman primates in tool-related cognitive capabilities."

New Caledonian crows living in the wild do create hooked probes from twigs, but the captive crow did something very different.

"To our knowledge, there are no confirmed reports of any animal making a hook out of unnatural material, such as wire, to solve a new problem," said Alex Kacelnik, a behavioral ecologist who coauthored the report with Alex A. S. Weir and Jackie Chappell.

crow

In their Science article, the researchers point out that Betty's accomplishment—purposefully modifying objects into tools without prior experience—is almost unknown in the animal world.

Photograph courtesy of Science

The video on this page requires the RealPlayer plug-in.

Join National Geographic BirdWatcher
Become a Charter Member, and you'll receive a full-year subscription to the National Geographic BirdWatcher newsletter, and more! Information about membership is available at (U.S.) 888 532 6789, or by writing to ngbirdwatcher@ngs.org, or by visiting the Web site.


"The surprising thing about our crow is that, faced with a new problem, she worked out a new solution by herself," said Kacelnik. "In the wild, New Caledonian crows make hooks by working on twigs, but they live in social groups and follow age-old techniques in response to problems that the species may have been exposed to for thousands of years."

The crow, named Betty, was caught as a juvenile in Yaté, New Caledonia in March 2000. Since then, she has shared a large indoor room and a small outdoor aviary with Abel, a male brought to the laboratory in Wytham, Oxford after spending ten years in a New Caledonia zoo. A hatchway leads from the indoor room to a testing area.

Betty's toolmaking abilities came to light by accident during an experiment in which she and Abel had to choose between a hooked and a straight wire for retrieving small pieces of pig heart, their favorite food. When Abel made off with the hooked wire, Betty bent the straight wire into a hook and used the tool to lift a small bucket of food from a vertical pipe. This experiment was the first time the crows had been presented with wire.

The researchers then devised a new experiment to test Betty's startling behavior systematically. They placed one piece of straight garden wire on top of the tube and waited for either crow to try retrieving the food. In her ten successful retrievals, Betty bent the wire into a hook nine times. Abel retrieved the food once, without bending the wire.

Betty almost always tried to get the food with the straight wire first. She then made hooks of varying shapes by wedging one end of the wire into taped-up sections of the tube apparatus and tray, or by holding it in her feet, while pulling the other end with her bill.

The researchers say that Betty's creation of hooks cannot be attributed to the shaping or reinforcement of randomly generated behavior. And since she had no other crows to model, no training with pliant objects, and very limited prior experience with wire, they see her actions as novel and purposeful.

"To solve a new problem, she did something she had never done before," said Kacelnik. "Naturally, she must have exploited abilities she acquired doing other tasks in the past, but she showed the capacity to solve a new problem in a creative way by reorganizing her experience."

In their Science article, the researchers point out that Betty's accomplishment—purposefully modifying objects into tools without prior experience—is almost unknown in the animal world. The article cites an experiment in which chimpanzees failed to straighten a length of piping, and pass it through a hole to retrieve an apple, until they were coached.

For Kacelnik, Betty's use of creative problem-solving based on past experience may be evidence of inferential reasoning. Some scientists, he said, believe that even apes lack this capability.

"We do not yet know how far Betty and her fellow New Caledonian crows go in this direction, but this particular case is tantalizing," said Kacelnik. "We are very curious to learn the extent and nature of the cognitive adaptations that allow this. It may turn out that these crows are also better than other species of related organisms at solving tasks not involving tools. We are working on it."

Recent Bird Stories by National Geographic News

Rare Warbler Eluding Extinction in U.S.
In India, Nets Save Baby Storks From Falls
Bald Eagle Bounces Back After Decades of Persecution
Birder's Journal: It's Survey Season for Breeding Birds
Birder's Journal: Chasing Down Warblers
Africa's New Safari Trend Is for the Birds
Decline of Red-Tailed Hawks Has U.S. Scientists Puzzled
A Reason to Give Thanks: The Return of the Wild Turkey
State Bird of Hawaii Unmasked as Canadian
Harry Potter Owl Scenes Alarm Animal Advocates
Ultrarare Woodpecker Spurs Ultimate Birding Trip
"Extinct" Woodpecker Still Elusive, But Signs Are Good
Extinct Dodo Related to Pigeons, DNA Shows
Bird Extinctions May Hold Clues to Human Survival, Author Says
Tagging Hobbles Penguins, Some Researchers in Cape Town Contend
Patagonia Penguins Make a Comeback
Penguin Decline in Antarctica Linked With Climate Change
Ice Buildup Hampers Penguin Breeding in Antarctica
Evolutionary Oddities: Duck Sex Organ, Lizard Tongue
Some Ducks Let Young Be Raised by Relatives
Turkey Vultures Flourish in the U.S. Thanks to Road Kill
Forecasting the Journey South

National Geographic Bird Resources

Bald Eagles: Come Back From the Brink
Experience the Sights and Sounds of Eagles

Nationalgeographic.com Bird-Watching Sites

Boston Area
Chicago Area
Florida Keys Area
Maine's Acadia National Park
Mount Rainier
New Orleans Area
New York City Area
North Carolina's Outer Banks
Philadelphia Area
Portland Area
Rocky Mountain National Park
Salt Lake City Area
San Francisco Area
Santa Fe Area
South Dakota's Black Hills
Utah
Washington's Olympic National Park
Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park
Yellowstone National Park
Yosemite National Park

From the National Geographic Store

Guide to North American Birds
Portable Birdsong Identifier
Birder's Journal
Songbirds Puzzle

Join the National Geographic Society

Join the world's largest nonprofit scientific and educational organization, and help further our mission to increase and diffuse knowledge of the world and all that is in it. Membership dues are used to fund exploration and educational projects and members also receive 12 annual issues of the Society's official journal, National Geographic. Click here for details of our latest subscription offer: Go>>

 Related Stories

 Related Websites








More Information
News Alerts From the National Geographic News Desk

Receive regular e-mail alerts about breaking National Geographic news. Send an e-mail to the news desk with the word "Subscribe" in the header field. We'll let you know whenever we publish an interesting story.

Today's Top National Geographic News Stories: Go>>



More Information