Crow - Wikipedia Crows are highly intelligent birds known for problem solving, tool use, and social behavior Studies have shown that crows create and use tools, recognize and remember individual human faces, and share information with other crows about potential threats
American Crow Overview, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology American Crows are familiar over much of the continent: large, intelligent, all-black birds with hoarse, cawing voices They are common sights in treetops, fields, and roadsides, and in habitats ranging from open woods and empty beaches to town centers
Crows Are Smart — Just Like Humans, They Hold Grudges and Use Tools Crows cache food, and will move it if another creature sees them hiding it They use tools, and fashion tools from twigs, forming them into the right shape for the job, making hooked tools to snag food
Crow | Corvidae Family, Adaptability Intelligence | Britannica Crow, any of various glossy black birds found in most parts of the world, with the exception of southern South America Crows are generally smaller and not as thick-billed as ravens, which belong to the same genus
10 Fun Facts About the American Crow | Audubon While crows in folklore and fiction are often associated with trickery and death (a group of crows is, after all, called a “murder”), recent research has shed new light on just how intelligent and family-oriented these birds can be