Wasn't here a video floating around a while back of a crow trolling a couple cats until the cats get into a fight, and the crow just sits back watching? You could almost swear you see the crow laughing...
I see a traind bird doing what it was trained to do. Good job bird!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRnI4dhZZxQ
Using jar lid as a sled and repeatedly sliding down roof.
I don't really see why that would be fun since the bird can fly anyway.
tool use is extremely, extremely rare in animals.
This is actually quite remarkable.
And as for "training;" If you mean leaving the crow in a cage with various options until it figures out what to do, then yeah, you might consider that "training."
But we really call that problem solving.
It's not nearly as rare as we once believed. To think you believed the OPs video as presented is awesome. :thumbsup:
I want my own murder to do my bidding.
KT
yep, looks trained.
Wow that bird is really smart! it picks up the first rock and realizes that it's too heavy, drops it, and picks up a lighter one to get the job done with less effort! thats efficient!!
I assume the documentary goes over them leaving nuts in the road for cars to crack open.
When I was growing up there was a pet crow in town that could say a few words (football, touchdown and herbie), he used to be someones pet but got away. One story I haven't heard about in these documentaries is that in Utah there are reports of crows chasing deer into the road to be hit by cars. It kinda blew my mind when my nephew told me that. A murder of crows working together to take down a large animal.
They are protected by the migratory bird act, like eagles. So even though there are 30+ million crows in US, and they are killed by hundreds of thousands by farmers and government agencies, you are not even allowed to own a crow feather.