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Birds & Blooms on MSNHow to Identify a Clark’s NutcrackerLearn what Clark's nutcracker looks like and sounds like. Plus, learn how the birds' food-caching ways help forests and when ...
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Boing Boing on MSNCorvid intelligence: study shows crows understanding geometryCrows are objectively awesome-leaving gifts for humans who prove themselves worthy, exploring interspecies friendships and learning to count-and a new study on corvid intelligence published in Science ...
Crows can recognize geometric patterns, suggesting that humans aren't unique in understanding shape structure.
Can a crow—or any bird—make decisions of this sort? Researchers studying crows, ravens, and other corvids (the family of songbirds that includes crows, jays, rooks, magpies, and others ...
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WyoFile on MSNForest-dwelling raptor, aka ‘flying mountain lion,’ goes for groceries in the cityGoshawks, the largest of the accipiters, are most often seen in forests, but an adult male recently made a foray into Pinedale.
Biologists already knew the corvid family–it includes crows, ravens, rooks, magpies and jackdaws–to be among the smartest of all birds. But this remarkable piece of behavior–it features in ...
This year, we enjoyed the welcome and constant companionship of a family of gray jays. A bold and curious bird, the gray jay ...
An unusually long-tailed black-and-white corvid with a black bill ... Flight: relatively slow, with steady, rowing wingbeats, but the birds are easily able to quickly change direction in flight.
Well, the magpie is a corvid and the corvids are particularly ... from all over come to the Sacramento region to see this bird. You’re a member of the Audubon Society — have you noticed ...
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