Study: Ravens communicate better than most of animal kingdom Wild ravens in the Austrian alps have been observed using their beaks and body language to direct another raven’s attention to a specific object, marking the first time such complex gesturing has been documented in an animal outside of humans and their primate cousins.
Can crows read? Crows can recognise and ascribe numerical meaning to symbols, a new study shows, suggesting that the unusually intelligent birds may be able to “read” numbers and simple icons.
In Connecticut, A Return Of The Raven n the nest were three baby ravens, born this spring practically within the shadow of Hartford skyscrapers, a figurative exclamation point to the dramatic resurgence of the common raven in Connecticut, a bird that was anything but common for the past two centuries.
Brainy Birds Live the High Life in Cities The brainier a bird is, the better its chances are of thriving in a city, according to a new study that found many big-brained birds can succeed in urban environments.