Isn't this behaviour attributed to Black Kites rather than Whistling?
Cheers
Dave
On 13/05/2009, at 4:11 PM, Carl Clifford wrote:
Dear All,
 The following was posted on the WildbirdSingapore group and is said to  
be from an Etnoornithology forum.
A Remarkable Case of Tool-Using in a Bird
Author(s): Ashley Montagu
 Source: American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 72, No. 3 (Jun.,  
1970), p. 610
Published by: Blackwell Publishing on behalf of the American  
Anthropological Association
Stable URL: http://www.jstor. org/stable/ 673006
Accessed: 11/05/2009 12:34
Accepted for publication 18 February 1970.
 To the growing list of tool-users among animals other than man should  
be added the Northern Territory kitehawk or, as he is called among the  
aborigines of that part of Australia, the firehawk. In the fascinating  
book about his life, I, The Aboriginal (Ade- laide: Griffin, 1962),  
written down by Douglas Lockwood, Waipuldanya, an abori- ginal of the  
Alawa tribe at Roper River, says, "I have seen a hawk pick up a smoul-  
dering stick in its claws and drop it in a fresh patch of dry grass  
half a mile away, then wait with its mates for the mad exodus of  
scorched and frightened rodents and rep- tiles. When that area was  
burnt out the pro- cess was repeated elsewhere. We call these fires  
Jaluran" (p. 93). Is this, possibly, the first recorded case of the  
use of fire by a nonhuman animal?
 I presume the kitehawk is the Whistling Kite, as Kite Hawk appears to  
be one of its alternative common names.  Has anyone ever heard of this  
behaviour? Perhaps some-one with access to JSTOR could read the  
article and let me know what they think? Perhaps one of the loacls was  
pulling the leg of the Anthropologist.
Cheers,
Carl Clifford
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