Posts Tagged ‘clever ravens’

More Raven Mysteries

August 8, 2008

My hat off and a “Thanks” to the folks at curiousexpeditions.org for a great post on Ravens. It is a wide ranging post covering ravens in natural history to ravens as inspiration and presence in literature. Given that, strangely enough, one of the common search ways that folks stumble into the Wild Resiliency blog is through a Google search for ravens, it seems only appropriate to pass back a link and so share a resource for the Raven lovers among us.

My most recent Raven story occurred the other day when I drove by a local school yard and noticed a circle of perhaps ten ravens gathered around a couple of the large black birds in the middle of the group. Strange thing was that I felt transported back to my own childhood school days. One of these two central birds was standing over the other, the second bird lying upside down on its back with its legs stretched up into the air….

Reminded me of one dog going submissive on another… and as already mentioned, of an all too human school yard brawl scene.

Ravens are smart. Common ravens have among the largest brains of any bird species and they have been shown to fashion tools of leaves to use them to extract grubs as well as solve complex puzzles. Young ravens are exceedingly playful and have been observed sliding down snowbanks, feet akimbo, squawking in delight. They even play games and seemingly tease other species, such as boldly playing catch-me-if-you-can with wolves and dogs…and then there’s the talking.

So smart, in fact, is the Covus Corax, that a single bird, a raven named Grip, is responsible for two, count them two, contributions to the cannon of classic literature. Not even Lassie can compete with that. (curiousexpeditions.org)

I wonder what inspirations and strategies for thrivability this black bird of mythology might teach us? Oh, and here are couple of links relating to ravens on the wildresiliencyblog.

Intelligence in Nature: Clever Ravens

Intelligence in Nature: Clever Ravens Followup

More coming soon on the Intelligence in Nature theme here.

Intelligence in Nature – “Clever Ravens”

July 10, 2007

The intelligence required to perceive the world as if we were standing in the shoes of another is not only a indication of emotional intelligence in humans, our future may actually rest upon this capacity and skill set. That this capacity has deep ancestral roots within us is perhaps even cause for hope. Check out this article in Der Spiegel titled “Clever Ravens: Masters of Deceit.”

Ravens can toboggan, ride other animals and spy on their enemies. Their life as cadgers stealing prey from wolves, eagles and bears has made them outstandingly intelligent. But do ravens know what they’re doing and why? Austrian biologists want to find out.

Those ravens! Their newest form of entertainment is wild boar rodeo. Biologist Mareike Stöwe swears she often sees ravens trotting through the enclosure on the backs of irritated wild boars.

“Ravens like to make an impression,” Stöwe says. The birds are always out to perform unusual tricks likely to impress their kin. Dangling head-down from a branch is another popular past-time of theirs….

The article reports on research at the Austrian aviaries where ravenologists are asking the question: How intelligent are ravens?

The stories in the article are delightful and intriguing as to their intelligence, and like any one who has spent considerable time in the outdoors I have my journal of raven stories. On top of Lake Peak, at near 12,000′ and just outside of Santa Fe, here in the southern Rocky Mountains, I once was mesmerized by a single raven who soared and played in the high winds with a host of perhaps a dozen other ravens.

But this single raven had a stick in one claw that it would throw into the air andRaven then let it fall and fall and…and then it would dive and gracefully retrieve the stick with the other foot, as if performing aerial gymnastics. And then it would do it again, and again; it was still playing with the stick when I scampered down off the windy summit about an hour later.

Driving down a little dirt road in Santa Fe, once I came around a corner only to see a large raven hanging upside down on a power line. I thought the poor thing dead but as soon as it noticed my presence it gave a seemingly embarrassed flap of wings and righted itself into a posture of dignity.

And then in Big Bend years ago my partner and I were raced down a dirt road by a raven, me driving and it flying, at something above 45 miles an hour. Another raven off to the side and flying just a bit slower seemed to be squawking to its friend, “Fly Sammy Fly!”

And who has not been entertained while in the woods by their chortling and squawking and croaking…? I could not begin to count the times my own spirit has felt lifted by watching one or more soar playfully in a wind. And like many a codger I find myself exchanging greetings and questions and notations with them…just because they’ll do it with you. What that says about my intelligence is…you can decide.

But I did begin this post to write about intelligence in nature, and within us, with ravens as my entry. Jeremy Narby has a wonderful little book entitled Intelligence in Nature: An Inquiry into Knowledge; Chapter 5 is entitled Plants as Brains. Here are a few quotes, some from his conversations with a research professor of biology at the University of Edinburgh, a fellow of the Royal Society, the oldest scientific society in Great Britain, an Anthony Trewavas:

…scientists have long regarded plants as passive creatures, because they lack obvious movement. “Now to my mind, that assumption is wrong because it requires an equating of movement with intelligence. Movement is an expression of intelligence. It is not intelligence itself. Now, the definitions of intelligence are difficult…”

…found it necessary to peel away the human aspects that come with the notion of intelligence. In his view, our intelligence did not suddenly appear when we became Homo sapiens. It evolved from other organisms. Hence the importance of defining intelligence in a way that does not apply exclusively to humans… described intelligence as adaptively variable behavior within the lifetime of the individual.

…Possessing plasticity is in a sense foresight of the possible conditions in which the plant will actually find itself.

…Science now indicates that plants, like animals and humans, can learn about the world around them and use cellular mechanisms similar to those we rely on. Plants learn, remember, and decide, without brains.

I asked him about future research on plant intelligence. What remained to be done, he said, was to work out how the whole plant assesses its circumstances, makes a decision, and changes what it is doing in response to the environment it perceives. “That requires a lot of communication between the various parts of a plant. It has become an extremely complex area, remarkably complicated. And I can see that we have underestimated this in the past to an enormous extent…. what they are looking at, in fact, is an organism that does exhibit intelligent behavior, and not in the ways they normally perceive intelligence.”

Plants do not have brains, so much as act like them. (pgs. 83-94)

I picked up the link for the Der Speigel article on ravens from Art Hutchinson’s Mapping Strategy blog (thanks Art), where Art quotes:

Such intricate strategic planning requires ravens to consider things from various points of view. It’s almost a question of seeing through the eyes of others.

and then comments:

“Some human strategists don’t do as well.”

Indeed, at this critical juncture of human history, it seems to me that the first mark of strategic human intelligence will be to cease measuring the worth and value and intelligence of the other than human world from the humancentric perspective. Our thrive-ability may well depend upon our ability to remember the wildness that still lives within us, that is innately connected to all of life, to all our relations, and to see ourselves “through the eyes of others.”

If ravens and plants can…then perhaps we can remember how to as well!

The respected biologist E.O. Wilson recently advocated as much, as reported in this story from the Washington Post, titled Saving Earth from the Ground UP.

Wilson was focused on putting self-absorbed Homo sapiens in some ecological context. If humans were to disappear — he doesn’t advocate this, for the record — the effects on the insect world would be minimal. “It’s unlikely a single insect species would go extinct except three forms of body and head lice,” he said.

So let me close this longer than intended early and learning post by saying, I think it’s time we put the wild back into our resiliency too! Let’s stop bouncing back to… you pick it… and let’s transform our way into the future. Our problem solving intelligence will be of great value on this journey, but the deeper intelligence we are required to now rely upon is embedded in the ancestral and cellular memory of our bodies and spirits.

So go play with a raven and watch it soar. See if it won’t take your spirit for a flight. Talk with one and see if it won’t talk back! In fact, try talking with your plants and see but what they might not talk back too.

Warned you, I’m an old codger.

(An additional link for the inspired: Steven Harrod Buhner, The Secret Teachings of Plants; The Intelligence of the Heart in the Direct Perception of Nature. More on his work later.)