Rutz Christian, St Clair James J H
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, United Kingdom.
Behav Processes. 2012 Feb;89(2):153-65. doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2011.11.005. Epub 2011 Dec 28.
New Caledonian (NC) crows Corvus moneduloides are the most prolific avian tool users. In the wild, they use at least three distinct tool types to extract invertebrate prey from deadwood and vegetation, with some of their tools requiring complex manufacture, modification and/or deployment. Experiments with captive-bred, hand-raised NC crows have demonstrated that the species has a strong genetic predisposition for basic tool use and manufacture, suggesting that this behaviour is an evolved adaptation. This view is supported by recent stable-isotope analyses of the diets of wild crows, which revealed that tool use provides access to highly profitable hidden prey, with preliminary data indicating that parents preferentially feed their offspring with tool-derived food. Building on this work, our review examines the possible evolutionary origins of these birds' remarkable tool-use behaviour. Whilst robust comparative analyses are impossible, given the phylogenetic rarity of animal tool use, our examination of a wide range of circumstantial evidence enables a first attempt at reconstructing a plausible evolutionary scenario. We suggest that a common ancestor of NC crows, originating from a (probably) non-tool-using South-East Asian or Australasian crow population, colonised New Caledonia after its last emersion several million years ago. The presence of profitable but out-of-reach food, in combination with a lack of direct competition for these resources, resulted in a vacant woodpecker-like niche. Crows may have possessed certain behavioural and/or morphological features upon their arrival that predisposed them to express tool-use rather than specialised prey-excavation behaviour, although it is possible that woodpecker-like foraging preceded tool use. Low levels of predation risk may have further facilitated tool-use behaviour, by allowing greater expenditure of time and energy on object interaction and exploration, as well as the evolution of a 'slow' life-history, in which prolonged juvenile development enables acquisition of complex behaviours. Intriguingly, humans may well have influenced the evolution of at least some of the species' tool-oriented behaviours, via their possible introduction of candlenut trees together with the beetle larvae that infest them. Research on NC crows' tool-use behaviour in its full ecological context is still in its infancy, and we expect that, as more evidence accumulates, some of our assumptions and predictions will be proved wrong. However, it is clear from our analysis of existing work, and the development of some original ideas, that the unusual evolutionary trajectory of NC crows is probably the consequence of an intricate constellation of interplaying factors.
新喀里多尼亚乌鸦(NC乌鸦,学名:Corvus moneduloides)是最擅长使用工具的鸟类。在野外,它们至少会使用三种不同类型的工具从枯木和植被中获取无脊椎动物猎物,其中一些工具需要复杂的制作、改造和/或使用。对人工饲养、人工育雏的NC乌鸦进行的实验表明,该物种在基本工具使用和制作方面具有很强的遗传倾向,这表明这种行为是一种进化而来的适应性特征。最近对野生乌鸦饮食的稳定同位素分析支持了这一观点,分析显示使用工具能够获取高收益的隐藏猎物,初步数据表明,亲鸟会优先用工具获取的食物喂养后代。在此基础上,我们的综述探讨了这些鸟类非凡的工具使用行为可能的进化起源。鉴于动物使用工具在系统发育上非常罕见,无法进行有力的比较分析,但我们通过对大量间接证据的研究,首次尝试构建一个合理的进化场景。我们认为,NC乌鸦的共同祖先源自(可能)不使用工具的东南亚或澳大拉西亚乌鸦种群,在几百万年前最后一次露出水面后殖民了新喀里多尼亚。那里存在着收益高但难以获取的食物,再加上对这些资源缺乏直接竞争,形成了一个类似啄木鸟的空缺生态位。乌鸦在抵达时可能已经具备了某些行为和/或形态特征,这使它们倾向于表现出工具使用行为,而非专门的猎物挖掘行为,尽管也有可能在工具使用之前就已经存在类似啄木鸟的觅食行为。低水平的捕食风险可能进一步促进了工具使用行为,因为这样可以在物体交互和探索上投入更多的时间和精力,还促进了“缓慢”生活史的进化,即延长的幼年期发育能够习得复杂行为。有趣的是,人类很可能通过引入桐油树以及侵害桐油树的甲虫幼虫,影响了该物种至少一些以工具为导向的行为的进化。对NC乌鸦工具使用行为在完整生态背景下的研究仍处于起步阶段,我们预计,随着更多证据的积累,我们的一些假设和预测将会被证明是错误的。然而,从我们对现有研究的分析以及一些原创观点的提出可以清楚地看出,NC乌鸦不同寻常的进化轨迹可能是一系列复杂相互作用因素的结果。