Showing 21 - 40 results of 1,537 for search '"The Crow"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
  1. 21

    Word- and Morpheme-Level Code-Switching in Crow by Graczyk, Randolph

    Published 2008-01-01
    Subjects: “…Crow language…”
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    Article
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    Compound tool construction by New Caledonian crows by von Bayern, A, Danel, S, Auersperg, A, Mioduszewska, B, Kacelnik, A

    Published 2018
    “…We presented 8 naïve crows with combinable elements too short to retrieve food targets. …”
    Journal article
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    House crow presence as unsustainable urban indicator? by Nurul Ashikin Alias, Halimaton Saadiah Hashim

    Published 2016
    “…These areas provide abundant feeding opportunities for scavenging birds, in particular house crows. In Malaysia, hot spot areas for house crow nesting are in the Klang Valley, namely in Kuala Lumpur, Kajang and Klang which are in the Greater Kuala Lumpur area. …”
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    ‘Unequal Justice': Colonial Law and the Shooting of Jim Crow by Barry Patton

    Published 2006-10-01
    “…Although the shooting of Jim Crow has been mentioned by other authors, there has been no detailed discussion of the events. …”
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    Article
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    The ecological significance of tool use in New Caledonian crows. by Rutz, C, Bluff, L, Reed, N, Troscianko, J, Newton, J, Inger, R, Kacelnik, A, Bearhop, S

    Published 2010
    “…We assayed individual-level tool-use dependence in wild New Caledonian crows by analyzing stable isotope profiles of the birds' feathers, blood, and putative food sources. …”
    Journal article
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    Behavioural ecology: tool manufacture by naive juvenile crows. by Kenward, B, Weir, A, Rutz, C, Kacelnik, A

    Published 2005
    “…New Caledonian crows (Corvus moneduloides) are the most prolific avian tool-users. …”
    Journal article
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    Vocal culture in New Caledonian crows Corvus moneduloides by Bluff, L, Kacelnik, A, Rutz, C

    Published 2010
    “…Here, we investigate the potential for vocal culture in one of the few animals for which material culture has been suggested: the New Caledonian crow Corvus moneduloides. We show that this species: (1) possesses the capacity for social learning of vocalizations (experimental evidence in the form of a captive subject that reproduces human speech and other anthropogenic noises); and (2) exhibits significant large-scale, population-level variation in its vocalizations (cross-island playback experiments, with analyses controlling for a substantial set of potentially confounding variables). …”
    Journal article