Video of Wild Crow Tool Use Caught With Tail Cams
willatnewscientist writes "Scientists from the University of Oxford have recorded New Caledonian crows using tools in the wild for first time. The footage was captured by attaching tiny cameras to their tail feathers. The wireless cameras weigh just 14 grammes and can be worn by the crows without disturbing their natural behavior. The trick has provided the first direct evidence of the birds' using tools in the wild and may represent an important development in animal behavior studies. 'The camera also contains a simple radio transmitter that reveals the crows' location. This lets the researchers track them at a distance of few hundred metres, so that they can catch the camera's video signal with a portable receiving dish. Up to 70 minutes of footage can be broadcast by the camera's chip, and the camera is shed once the bird moults its tail feathers.'"
That's pretty neat, we have a lot of crows where I work and I've observed ravens at campgrounds which are very well practiced in employing ingenious methods of
WHAT! WAIT!
14 gram video camera? 70 minutes of video footage? Whoa! What's the real news for nerds story here? Damn, I need one of those cameras!!! (c= I've been fiddling with converting these webcams for astro imaging I wonder what I could take from the top of (or bottom of) a kite or one of those tiny helicopters. W0000t
Crows, yeah, very clever birds. Probably could learn a lot from them... wow, neat camera...
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Crows Gone Wild video.
Dog is my co-pilot.
The wireless cameras weigh just 14 grammes and can be worn by the crows without disturbing their natural behavior.
It doesn't disturb them? What is the airspeed velocity of an unladen crow?
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
...to get this damn camera unstuck from my tail?!?
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"You are not remembered for doing what is expected of you." - Atul Chitnis
but this isnt the first time we've known they use tools. check this out http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7329182515885554944 [clever crows]
Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
Crows have been observed using tools before. A particularly interesting instance of this is when they drop nuts into crosswalks at intersections, wait until cars smash them, observe the pedestrians crossing the street (its safe to cross), and retrieve the nut's meat.
Birds are damn smart, like that talking parrot who just died.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=HmKO-QMyLc4
Dropping nuts on a busy road where cars function as nutcrackers..
Bashing away with a stick is one thing.
But having limited success with a tool and then modifying the same tool to suit the problem at hand is an even more impressive display of intelligence, I think...
http://youtube.com/watch?v=03ykewnc0oE (Crow fails to grab something with straight wire, so it bends it into a hook.)
http://www.ongoing-tales.com/SERIALS/oldtime/FAIRYTALES/aesop8.html
crows and ravens are seen as an intelligent and trickster characters in many ancient cultures around the world, some notable examples of prominent intelligent and tricky crow mythology being from the pacific northwest of north america, and ancient scandinavia
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1326277
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
I thought the camera added 20 pounds. I guess black really is slimming.
In the book the "In the Company of Crows and Ravens", crows on the researchers' campus could distinguish two researchers out of thousands of people and would continually harangue them whenever they were seen as they were rather displeased at previously being captured and manhandled. I wonder how these crows are responding to surveillance and the ability of the human researchers to track them wherever they go? Are any of them self aware enough to know that the device is associated with humans and remove it? What can we learn from them about operating in a society where people are increasingly under constant surveillance? A paranoid might say that its their tail feathers now, but your equivalent is on the line next. :)
Perhaps you meant to say "croverlords"?
Today's lucky number is: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
Crows clearly have a basic understanding of caws and effect!