New Caledonian crows may understand how to displace water to receive a reward, with the causal understanding level of a 5-7 year-old child, said researchers from the University of Auckland in New Zealand.
Understanding causal relationships between actions is a key feature of human cognition. However, the extent to which non-human animals are capable of understanding causal relationships is not well understood.
Scientists used the Aesop's fable riddle - in which subjects drop stones into water to raise the water level and obtain an out-of reach-reward - to assess New Caledonian crows' causal understanding of water displacement.
Six wild crows were tested after a brief training period for six experiments, during which the authors noted rapid learning (although not all the crows completed every experiment).
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Researchers noted that these tasks did not test insightful problem solving, but were directed at the birds' understanding of volume displacement.
Crows completed 4 of 6 water displacement tasks, including preferentially dropping stones into a water-filled tube instead of a sand-filled tube, dropping sinking objects rather than floating objects, using solid objects rather than hollow objects, and dropping objects into a tube with a high water level rather than a low one.
According to the authors, results indicate crows may possess a sophisticated - but incomplete - understanding of the causal properties of volume displacement, rivalling that of 5-7 year old children.
"These results are striking as they highlight both the strengths and limits of the crows' understanding," said Sarah Jelbert from the University of Auckland.
"In particular, the crows all failed a task which violated normal causal rules, but they could pass the other tasks, which suggests they were using some level of causal understanding when they were successful," Jelbert said.