Invention and Modification of New Tool-Use Behavior

Author(s):  
Shinya Yamamoto
Keyword(s):  
Tool Use ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 222 ◽  
pp. 112938 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camilla Cenni ◽  
Maurizio Casarrubea ◽  
Noëlle Gunst ◽  
Paul L. Vasey ◽  
Sergio M. Pellis ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Shinya Yamamoto ◽  
Gen Yamakoshi ◽  
Tatyana Humle ◽  
Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Keyword(s):  
Tool Use ◽  

2019 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 1277-1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annette L. Fayet ◽  
Erpur Snær Hansen ◽  
Dora Biro

Documenting novel cases of tool use in wild animals can inform our understanding of the evolutionary drivers of the behavior’s emergence in the natural world. We describe a previously unknown tool-use behavior for wild birds, so far only documented in the wild in primates and elephants. We observed 2 Atlantic puffins at their breeding colonies, one in Wales and the other in Iceland (the latter captured on camera), spontaneously using a small wooden stick to scratch their bodies. The importance of these observations is 3-fold. First, while to date only a single form of body-care-related tool use has been recorded in wild birds (anting), our finding shows that the wild avian tool-use repertoire is wider than previously thought and extends to contexts other than food extraction. Second, we expand the taxonomic breadth of tool use to include another group of birds, seabirds, and a different suborder (Lari). Third, our independent observations span a distance of more than 1,700 km, suggesting that occasional tool use may be widespread in this group, and that seabirds’ physical cognition may have been underestimated.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 13787-13795
Author(s):  
Gábor Módra ◽  
István Maák ◽  
Ádám Lőrincz ◽  
Orsolya Juhász ◽  
Péter János Kiss ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Boris Schafer ◽  
Nicklas Bergfeldt ◽  
Maria Jose Riveiro Carballa ◽  
Tom Ziemke
Keyword(s):  
Tool Use ◽  

Author(s):  
Ann Weaver ◽  
Stan Kuczaj

Play and tool use are controversial in part because both have been challenging to define. Play behavior continues to elude specific definition but is currently recognized as a legitimate behavioral classification, especially when an activity involves handling objects (toys), although play does not require object handling. In contrast, animal tool use behavior requires object handling that also meets criteria of purposeful and conditional handling in a specific context to achieve a goal. This report describes a form of object handling, grass-wearing behavior, exhibited by free-ranging bottlenose dolphins in St. Petersburg, FL, USA, to see if play or tool-use-like behavior explains it. During 9,551 sightings of 311 dolphins across 8 yrs of study (Jan 2006 – Dec 2013), N = 79 dolphins were observed with one or more blades of grass splayed across the dorsal fin 190 times. Grass-wearing was unrelated to activities conducted in seagrass meadows, age-sex class, or adult female reproductive phase. Grass-wearing was primarily related to changes in group composition (fusion events). It occurred in larger groups that were significantly more likely to be socializing in affiliative, explicitly sexual and playful contexts with only one observation during conflict, although grass-wearing occurred during travel, forage/feeding, and resting. The behavior was partly explained by play and tool-use-like behavior but is more consistent with dolphins self-decorating with grass as a stimulus enhancement in greeting or bids for attention.


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