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      Gourmand New Caledonian crows munch rare escargots by dropping

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          Manufacture and use of hook-tools by New Caledonian crows

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            Diversification and cumulative evolution in New Caledonian crow tool manufacture.

            Many animals use tools but only humans are generally considered to have the cognitive sophistication required for cumulative technological evolution. Three important characteristics of cumulative technological evolution are: (i) the diversification of tool design; (ii) cumulative change; and (iii) high-fidelity social transmission. We present evidence that crows have diversified and cumulatively changed the design of their pandanus tools. In 2000 we carried out an intensive survey in New Caledonia to establish the geographical variation in the manufacture of these tools. We documented the shapes of 5550 tools from 21 sites throughout the range of pandanus tool manufacture. We found three distinct pandanus tool designs: wide tools, narrow tools and stepped tools. The lack of ecological correlates of the three tool designs and their different, continuous and overlapping geographical distributions make it unlikely that they evolved independently. The similarities in the manufacture method of each design further suggest that pandanus tools have gone through a process of cumulative change from a common historical origin. We propose a plausible scenario for this rudimentary cumulative evolution.
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              Goffin cockatoos wait for qualitative and quantitative gains but prefer 'better' to 'more'

              Evidence for flexible impulse control over food consumption is rare in non-human animals. So far, only primates and corvids have been shown to be able to fully inhibit the consumption of a desirable food item in anticipation for a gain in quality or quantity longer than a minute. We tested Goffin cockatoos (Cacatua goffini) in an exchange task. Subjects were able to bridge delays of up to 80 s for a preferred food quality and up to 20 s for a higher quantity, providing the first evidence for temporal discounting in birds that do not cache food.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Ethology
                J Ethol
                Springer Nature
                0289-0771
                1439-5444
                September 2013
                July 16 2013
                September 2013
                : 31
                : 3
                : 341-344
                Article
                10.1007/s10164-013-0384-y
                a14250e1-a783-4daf-9a41-d8a57f30f9ad
                © 2013
                History

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