What do rooks (Corvus frugilegus) understand about physical contact?

Anne E Helme, Nicola S Clayton, Nathan J Emery
Author Information
  1. Anne E Helme: Sub-Department of Animal Behaviour, University of Cambridge, High Street, Madingley, Cambridge CB3 8AA, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Rooks (Corvus frugilegus) do not use tools, but rapidly solve tests of physical cognition. The authors tested whether rooks understand the concept of physical contact using a task comprising a clear horizontal tube containing a stick with a disk attached to it and a piece of food. The rooks chose which side to pull the stick from to make the food accessible. Two configurations were used, with either the food or disk central along the tube. All 8 rooks solved the food-central configuration, but failed the disk-central configuration. Although they did not demonstrate an understanding of contact, further tests established that they could learn to solve these tasks provided there were salient stick cues. This result may arise because sticks are ecologically important for rooks.

MeSH Term

Animals
Appetitive Behavior
Awareness
Birds
Comprehension
Concept Formation
Cues
Female
Kinesthesis
Male
Orientation
Physical Phenomena
Physics
Problem Solving
Proprioception
Psychomotor Performance
Transfer, Psychology

Word Cloud

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