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February 2005
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Article-in-a-Box
Donald Griffin Strove to give Animals their Due
Those of us who are fortunate to study animal behaviour cannot but
marvel at the seemingly conscious and intelligent behaviours that animals
sometimes display. Birds are known to adapt the behaviour they use to
obtain insects from under the barks of trees, to steal cream from milk
bottles covered with metal foil. Robert Hinde and others in England
showed that such behaviour was invented by a few individuals
and then copied by many others. Jane Goodall has described how chimpanzees
will select a small branch, remove leaves and twigs and thus fashion
it into a suitable tool, carry it to a termites nest and then
use it to retrieve termites by probing with it. Alex Kacelnik at Oxford
and others have shown how crows can bend pieces of metal wire and fashion
hooks with which they retrieve worms from bottles. Closer home, Milind
Watve and his students have shown that bee eaters will not approach
their nests if they spot intruders to whom they are visible, but will
do so if they spot intruders to whom they are not visible, suggesting
that bee eaters have what psychologists call a theory of mind.
In our own research, we have found numerous instances of members of
social wasp colonies behaving in seemingly intelligent ways. For example,
groups of workers will revolt against the queen and leave together to
start their own colony, a given set of workers will cooperate with some
queens and not others, workers will sometimes show preferential behaviour
towards one but not another dominant individual.
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Address for Correspondence
Raghavendra Gadagkar
Centre for Ecological Sciences
Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560 012, India
Email: ragh@ces.iisc.ernet.in
URL: http://ces.iisc.ernet.in/hpg/ragh
and
Evolutionary and Organismal Biology Unit
Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research
Jakkur P.O., Bangalore 560 064, India
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