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Compound tool construction by New Caledonian crows.

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New Caledonian crows can create novel compound tools by combining objects. This finding challenges previous understandings of tool construction, suggesting advanced cognitive abilities in these birds.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Ethology
  • Animal Behavior
  • Tool Use Evolution

Background:

  • Compound tool construction, combining multiple elements, is primarily observed in humans.
  • Tool innovation in humans typically emerges late in development.
  • Non-human compound tool construction is rare, with limited observations in captive great apes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether New Caledonian crows, known for tool use, can construct novel compound tools.
  • To determine if crows can combine simple objects into functional tools to solve a problem.

Main Methods:

  • Eight naive New Caledonian crows were presented with short, combinable elements insufficient for retrieving food.
  • The crows' ability to assemble these elements into functional tools was observed.
  • Behavior was analyzed to assess spontaneous construction and conditional use based on food location.

Main Results:

  • Four out of eight crows spontaneously combined elements to create functional compound tools.
  • One crow successfully constructed tools using 3 and 4 pieces when necessary.
  • Tool construction was conditional on the food target's position, indicating flexible problem-solving.

Conclusions:

  • New Caledonian crows demonstrate the ability to construct novel compound tools, a capability previously thought unique to humans.
  • This behavior suggests flexible cognitive abilities in crows, potentially involving planning and innovation, beyond simple reinforcement learning.
  • The findings indicate that complex cognitive processes underlying tool innovation may be more widespread in the animal kingdom than previously assumed.