Thursday, August 6, 2009

Rooks Use Reasoning Power to Get the Worm!

"Bird brain," heh? That may be a compliment to some humans! Watch the videos in this article and judge for yourselves. These are some very clever corvids. I don't know what the scientists call it, but to me this demonstrates problem solving that involves thinking and reasoning skills that some humans still do not possess today! Well, the rook is a Goddess-affiliated bird :) (Image: Siren eimi, from vase painting) From BBC News Clever rooks repeat ancient fable Thursday, 6 August 2009 By Rebecca Morelle Science reporter, BBC News One of Aesop's fables may have been based on fact, scientists report. In the tale, written more than 2,000 years ago, a crow uses stones to raise the water level in a pitcher so it can reach the liquid to quench its thirst. Now a study published in Current Biology reveals that rooks, a relative of crows, do just the same when presented with a similar situation. The team says the study shows rooks are innovative tool-users, even though they do not use tools in the wild. Another paper, published in the journal Plos One, shows that New Caledonian crows - which like rooks, are a member of the corvid group, along with ravens, jackdaws, magpies and jays - can use three tools in succession to reach a treat. Floating feast The crow and the pitcher fable was used by Aesop to illustrate that necessity is the mother of invention. But until now, the morality tale was not thought to have a grounding in fact. To investigate further, a team from the University of Cambridge and Queen Mary, University of London (QMUL) presented four captive rooks with a set-up analogous to the fable. The birds were shown a clear tube containing a small amount of water. Floating upon it was an out-of-reach worm. And a pile of stones were positioned nearby. Dr Nathan Emery, co-author of the paper, from QMUL, said: "The rooks have to put multiple stones in the tube until the worm floats to the top." And the four birds did just that. Two, called Cook and Fry, raised the water-level enough to grab the floating feast the very first time that they were presented with the test, while Connelly and Monroe were successful on their second attempt. Footage of the experiments shows the rooks first assessing the water level by peering at the tube from above and from the side, before picking up and dropping the stones into the water. The birds were extremely accurate, using the exact number of stones needed to raise the worm to a height where they could reach it. In another experiment, the rooks were presented with a similar scenario. This time they were given a combination of small and large stones. Overall, Dr Emery told BBC News, the rooks opted for the larger ones, raising the worm to the top of the tube more quickly. He said: "They are being as efficient as possible." And when given a choice between a tube filled with water and another filled with sawdust, the birds were more likely to opt for the liquid-filled tube. The researchers say their findings suggest that Aesop's ancient fable may have been based on fact. They said: "In folklore, it is rarely possible to know with certainty which corvid is being referred to. "Hence, Aesop's crow might have easily been Aesop's rook." 'No surprise' Earlier this year, the same team revealed that rooks were able to use different tools to solve a variety of complex problems. Rest of article.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

...rook/hroc(OE)=h/th/tr/tloc(N)=
beside, also words, rock,dog,locate,logic,dock,tock(of tic),lock, etc., includes the rook
of chess(on each side beside the board, a rookery of rock for rooks
often are abandoned ramparts, castles. ah, raven=r/l/tlatla(N)=
tla/flame, rha(volga)=flame river
(owing to rhubarb=rawend(arab)=
tlatla uentli(N)=flame offering=
also, lavender=la/tlatla uentli(N)=
fire offering(the color of flame and the firegod, lord turquoise/
xiuhtletl(N)=lord of herbs,comets,
time: the overall color of the universe=light lavender/turquoise=
turkish).
raven is creator deity for
pacific nw tribes, tlingit/haida,
because he is fire, associated
with calli(day3souls)=cacalotl(N)=
crow, house of being, the hearth,
and we are toca(N)/to(r)ch/ca(letra)=torches. at gobekli, 60%
of all sacrifices were rook/crow/
raven, 11k bc.

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