Crowing Up

GiftsOfTheCrow Whether we climb up or down the evolutionary scale, one factor remains constant—our human sense of superiority. Despite the castigation of biblical-era thinking in the eyes of many scientists, few are willing to relinquish that Genesis-bestowed sense of being the pinnacle of nature. We know the universe is vast, but we assume we’re the best and brightest in it. Climbing down the ladder a bit, we like to distance ourselves from our fellow creatures because of our superior mental capacity. That is why I am so engrossed by scientists who explore animal intelligence. We find we are not so different after all. Gifts of the Crow: How Perception, Emotion, and Thought Allow Smart Birds to Behave Like Humans, by John Marzluff and Tony Angell is such a book.

If you’re like most people in this electronic age, you probably haven’t given much thought to corvids. Corvids are the members of the crow family: ravens, jays, magpies, and, of course, crows. Scientists have long known that these birds are exceptionally intelligent, and Marzluff and Angell have written a spell-binding little book that shows a remarkable level of intellect among the birds. Documented cases of tool making and use, conscientious interaction, and perhaps even language, have occurred among the corvids. We try to shoo them from our crops with “scarecrows” and we poison them en masse when they become “pests,” but when we take the time to understand them, we find that we may be far darker than the crows.

Not that Gifts of the Crow is all that easy-going. There is plenty of brain physiognomy and quite a bit about brain chemistry here as well. Knowing that not all of us are scientists, though, Marzluff and Angell include a generous portion of narrative description of what corvids have been observed to accomplish. For three days in a row I climbed off the bus stunned, scanning the skies for crows, just to see for myself. In this suburban jungle outside the New York City metropolitan area, crows aren’t so abundant as they were when I lived in the Midwest. They will, however, serve to remind me, when I see one, that our privileged place in nature has more to do with our thumbs than with our intelligence. When I saw a solitary crow atop a tree during a neighborhood stroll after finishing the book, I stopped, smiled, and bowed. Nature belongs to each and every creature, and there sat one intelligent enough to appreciate it.

2 thoughts on “Crowing Up

  1. Crows behaving like humans, that’s the bad part, in that they seem to have learned our bad habits. I see then every day here in Jerusalem, in town and in the parks whereby they run the show as if it was their own Banana Republic. Harass and kill other non crows who dare enter the park, on occasion dogs, strew garage everywhere after removing the garbage bags from the containers and untying the knots. They are very nasty to other crows who step out of line, one day I saw them attacking a fellow crow mercilessly. I intervened as I had a biking helmet on and they threatened me but after a few minutes eventually went back to what they were doing. In the morning at the break of dawn from time to time one is awakened by them harassing the stray cats in the neighborhood. Human behavior, may be but bad human behavior. Did we learn from them or they from us….?

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Very interesting, Joe! Yes, the authors don’t pull any punches in that regard. They do cite bad crow behavior as well as good. The main point they are making has to do with intelligence. And we all know that smarts can be put to either good use or bad…

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