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Crows Use Tools Like Primates
While we often associate complex tool use with primates, a bird from a remote Pacific island gives them serious competition. The New Caledonian crow doesn't just use a stick to poke at things; it actively manufactures sophisticated tools. By carefully biting and stripping twigs, it fashions a variety of hooks and probes perfectly suited for extracting grubs from deep within tree trunks. This ability to create a custom tool for a specific job demonstrates a level of cognitive foresight and understanding of physical properties once thought to be exclusively human or primate.
This remarkable skill is believed to be a product of both genetics and social learning, passed down through generations. In famous lab experiments, a crow named Betty spontaneously bent a straight piece of wire into a hook to retrieve a bucket of food, a material she had never encountered in the wild. This proved the crows' ability to innovate and problem-solve on the fly. Researchers have also observed them using "meta-tools"—using one tool to get another, which is then used to access a reward.
This capacity for multi-step planning and manufacturing places the New Caledonian crow in an elite group of animal tool users, alongside chimpanzees. Their abilities are a stunning example of convergent evolution, where unrelated species independently evolve similar complex traits to solve environmental challenges. It challenges our understanding of intelligence, proving that a bird's brain, though structured very differently from a mammal's, can produce equally brilliant solutions.