Some of the tool-use activity appears to be innate, that is captive chicks reared only by humans and never shown any tool-use will fashion crude leaf tools from Pandanus leaf and use these to extract food (http://users.ox.ac.uk/~kgroup/tools/animal_tool.shtml). However in the wild the tools are far more sophisticated and also there are regional differences in tool design suggesting that social learning is involved.
I was fortunate to be able to spend a month on Mare Island in 2008 observing the crows in conjunction with a University of Auckland study attempting to determine the extent of social learning involved in tool-use. It was initially a slightly surreal sensation seeing lots of crows effortlessly making these leaf tools.
The following short clip from an experimental feeding table on Mare Island New Caledonia shows; stick tool use, then leaf tool making from a pandanus leaf (at 35sec.) and leaf tool use (at 56sec. till the end). You can hear young chicks calling from canopy nests not far from the feeding table:
Two pandanus leaf tools with a pandanus leaf showing where a tool was cut from:
The following clip is a scary/unbelievable/extraordinary recording made of Betty, a New Caledonian crow held in captivity at Oxford. Two crows were part of a "Choice" experiment where there were two wire "sticks", one with a bend which would allow it to be used as a hook to access a small bucket of food from inside a glass tube, the other a straight "stick". Would the crow more likely choose the useful bent stick? There were two crows in this experiment and at the start of this clip Betty's mate grabbed the hooked stick and she was left with the less useful straight stick. This is only the fifth trial in the experiment and the only exposure the crows have had with wire.
The following clip shows a crow fishing - dropping crumbs of dry bread on the surface of the pond. I think it was taken in Israel.
The following clip is of Prof Russell Gray at Auckland University discussing the probable social learning aspect to account for the regional differences in tool design.
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