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Post Info TOPIC: Animal Tool Use


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Animal Tool Use
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Goffin's cóckatoos can learn how to make and use wooden tools from each other

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cóckatoo 'can make its own tools'

A cóckatoo from a species not known to use tools in the wild has been observed spontaneously making and using tools for reaching food and other objects.
A Goffin's cóckatoo called 'Figaro', that has been reared in captivity and lives near Vienna, used his powerful beak to cut long splinters out of wooden beams in its aviary, or twigs out of a branch, to reach and rake in objects out of its reach.

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Paul the Octopus
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Paul the Octopus, the eight-armed oracle that correctly predicted the outcome of eight World Cup matches this year, has died. Devastated staff at his aquarium in Germany say they will build a memorial to him, and they have a comforting message for a world in mourning -- Paul II is waiting in the wings.
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RE: Animal Tool Use
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A rhesus monkey has been observed inventing a new way to open coconuts.
The monkey, known as 'Pinocchio' by the scientists studying him due to his big nose, first rolls a nut down to the docks on the island of Cayo Santiago, which lies to the east of Puerto Rico in the Caribbean Sea.
He then throws the nut up into the air and watches it smash onto concrete.
The technique is so complicated that no other monkey in Pinocchio's troop has yet learned to copy it.

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Cephalove
A many-armed love affair

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Paul the Octopus
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Paul the Octopus has been visited by the mayor of a Spanish town famous for its octopus festival.




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An octopus credited with psychic powers is to retire from making predictions following his World Cup success, his owners say.
Paul will go back to his old job "making children laugh", a spokeswoman for the German aquarium said.

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Octopus
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Ancient octopus mystery resolved

Females of the argonaut family (Argonautidae) release trapped air from their shells to control very precisely their movement through the water.
This ability has puzzled naturalists for over 2,000 years, dating back to observations made by Aristotle in 300 BC.
Research published in the Royal Society journal, Proceedings B, finally explains why it may have evolved.
The Australian researchers describe how the mechanism enables the creatures to conserve energy, avoid predators and protect eggs during the brooding stage.
The study, led by Dr Julian Finn of Museum Victoria in Melbourne, is the first to observe directly how this unique species of octopus captures air at the sea surface and uses it to its advantage.

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L

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Animal Tool Use
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An octopus and its coconut-carrying antics have surprised scientists.
Underwater footage reveals that the creatures scoop up halved coconut shells before scampering away with them so they can later use them as shelters.
Writing in the journal Current Biology, the team says it is the first example of tool use in octopuses.

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