Neuroscience

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Posts tagged cockatoo

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Cockatoos pick up tool use and manufacture through social learning

Two years ago, we brought you the story of Figaro, a Goffin’s cockatoo that lived at a research center in Vienna. These birds don’t use tools in the wild—Figaro’s minders even argue that the cockatoo’s curved beak makes tool use rather difficult for them.

But Figaro’s environment, which features lots of wired mesh, apparently drove him to some novel behaviors. He was observed splitting off splinters from wooden material, and the bird used them to retrieve objects (generally food or toys) that were on the wrong side of the wire. Figaro was making tools.

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Filed under cockatoo animal behavior cognition social learning tool use tool manufacture psychology neuroscience science

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Cockatoo ‘can make its own tools’
A cockatoo from a species not known to use tools in the wild has been observed spontaneously making and using tools for reaching food and other objects.
A Goffin’s cockatoo called ‘Figaro’, that has been reared in captivity and lives near Vienna, used his powerful beak to cut long splinters out of wooden beams in its aviary, or twigs out of a branch, to reach and rake in objects out of its reach.
Researchers from the Universities of Oxford and Vienna filmed Figaro making and using these tools. How the bird discovered how to make and use tools is unclear but shows how much we still don’t understand about the evolution of innovative behaviour and intelligence.
A report of the research is published this week in Current Biology.

Cockatoo ‘can make its own tools’

A cockatoo from a species not known to use tools in the wild has been observed spontaneously making and using tools for reaching food and other objects.

A Goffin’s cockatoo called ‘Figaro’, that has been reared in captivity and lives near Vienna, used his powerful beak to cut long splinters out of wooden beams in its aviary, or twigs out of a branch, to reach and rake in objects out of its reach.

Researchers from the Universities of Oxford and Vienna filmed Figaro making and using these tools. How the bird discovered how to make and use tools is unclear but shows how much we still don’t understand about the evolution of innovative behaviour and intelligence.

A report of the research is published this week in Current Biology.

Filed under animals cockatoo tool making using tools intelligence neuroscience psychology science

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