Just what you always suspected about corvids ...
http://www.nature.com/nsu/040322/040322-6.html
Crows switch sides to use tools
Study suggests brain differences between making and using tools.
24 March 2004
LAURA NELSON
 Crows use different sides of their beaks to make and use tools, 
researchers have found. This suggests that different parts of the brain 
may control making and using tools, and that the biology of handedness 
- or beakedness - may be more complex than we thought.
 Just like humans, New Caledonian crows are usually right 'handed' when 
it comes to tasks such as making tools.  But it turns out the birds use 
their tools with left and right sides equally, although individual 
crows prefer one side or the other.
 "This has opened up Pandora's box," says William McGrew, who studies 
chimpanzees' tool use at Miami University. "People always assumed 
handedness would be the same for using and making tools." Scientists 
will now be more wary of making this assumption, he adds.
Counting crows
 New Caledonian crows ( Corvus moneduloides ) are proficient tool users, 
extracting insects from holes and crevices using elegant hooks made 
from leaves.
 "Crows are more competent tool users than even chimpanzees," says 
zoologist Alex Weir of the University of Oxford, who led the study 
published in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 1. They also 
appear to have a different set of rules for handedness than people and 
chimps, he says.
 Previous research has shown that crows usually attack the left side of 
a leaf, using their right eye and the right side of their beak.
 Weir's team went one step further and watched ten birds using their 
tools. Five leaned the tool to the left, and five to the right, they 
found. Each crow almost always stuck to one side.
 Making and using tools may require different sets of muscles and brain 
signals, says McGrew.
 About 90% of people prefer to use their right hand for writing and 
other tasks; no one is sure why. Most researchers think the preference 
depends on which side of the brain controls each job. There could also 
be social reasons, such as being able to write without smudging ink.
 Other animals, such as chimpanzees, have individual biases for 
handedness without showing an overall bias for the species.
References
 Alex,  A. S.,   Weir,  B. K.,   Chappell,  J. &   Kacelnik,  A. B. A . 
Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B , published online, doi:10.1098/rsbl.2004.0183  
(2004). |Article|
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