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- From: wvenable@algona.stats.adelaide.edu.au (Bill Venables)
- Newsgroups: rec.birds
- Subject: Clever crows
- Date: 18 Nov 92 22:17:25
- Organization: Department of Statistics, University of Adelaide
- Lines: 19
- Message-ID: <WVENABLE.92Nov18221725@algona.stats.adelaide.edu.au>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: algona.stats.adelaide.edu.au
-
- There was an intriguing news article on Australian TV a few days back which
- showed some "crows" (rooks?) in Japan that had learned to place nuts on a
- busy road and wait for cars to crack them by running over them. They would
- then swoop down and scoop up the kernel, of course. They had even learned to
- re-position a nut that was not in the wheel line. Very impressive really.
-
- Folklore here in Australia has always insisted that crows are the most
- intelligent of the birds -- they are not supposed to be too put off by
- scarecrows, supposedly they can tell the difference between a person carrying
- a stick and another carrying a rifle, and it is also claimed that they post
- scouts and lookouts when they attack crops, like cockatoos. However
- ornithological orthodoxy has always regarded these claims very sceptically.
- Perhaps they are not so far fetched after all.
-
- Bill
- --
- ___________________________________________________________________________
- Bill Venables, Dept. of Statistics, | Email: venables@stats.adelaide.edu.au
- Univ. of Adelaide, South Australia. | Tel: +61 8 228 5412 Fax: ...232 5670
-