Friday, April 04, 2025

Lessons from the Crow: Nature's clever Collaborators



Lessons from the Crow: Nature’s Clever Collaborators
By S. N. Roy
“From cawcawing defenders to cooing mimics, the humble crow reveals the power of intelligence, adaptability, and community.”


Over the years, I’ve come to admire crows not just as birds, but as intelligent and remarkably cooperative beings. My encounters with them—some direct, others observed from a distance—have often left me amazed at their ability to adapt, learn, and act collectively in the face of challenges. Let me share a few such instances that cemented this belief.

One morning in Bhopal, while I was sitting on the verandah of my bungalow in BHEL, I noticed a strange commotion. The trees lining the lawn were filled with cawcawing crows—hundreds of them, agitated and frantic. It seemed as though they were faced with an imminent threat. My gardener, busy in the vegetable patch, pointed toward the mango tree. A large snake was halfway up its trunk, dangerously close to the community nest where the crows had laid their eggs.

As is well known, crows often use a shared nesting system. They take turns sitting on their eggs, a sort of collective parenting. That morning, the entire crow community had responded to a call of danger. Crows from nearby areas flew in and surrounded the tree, shrieking in alarm, united in defense of their collective home. I called in a snake catcher, who carefully captured the snake—only to discover that it had actually swallowed a frog and wasn’t aiming for the nest at all. But to the crows, it was a clear and present danger. Once the snake was gone, the entire flock dispersed quietly to their respective perches, their mission accomplished. The episode left me deeply impressed by their sense of community and alertness.

A very different, yet equally striking, experience happened in Kolkata. I was sitting in the drawing room of our flat when I heard a peculiar sound from the tree behind the building. It was a crow, but it wasn’t cawing. It was cooing—like a cuckoo. It took me a moment to place the sound. As we know, cuckoos lay their eggs in crows’ nests and rely on crows to hatch them. I wondered if that particular crow, raised alongside a cuckoo chick, had somehow absorbed and retained the cuckoo’s calls during its formative days. It was a surprising but plausible case of cross-species mimicry—a crow that had, perhaps unwittingly, adopted part of a cuckoo’s identity.

Crows also exhibit remarkable resourcefulness in nest-building. I’ve often caught them in the act of stealing broom straws from our balcony. Not a twig or straw goes to waste. They pick, strip, and carry off bits of household material—anything that suits their purpose. To them, the city is not a challenge but a resourceful playground.

One of the most fascinating crow stories I read was about a crow in England, named Frido. An elderly woman would walk her dog around her lawn every day, holding the leash. Frido, having observed this routine closely, one day picked up the end of the leash in its beak and flew low around the lawn. The obedient dog, as if guided by an invisible hand—or rather a wing—began walking behind the crow, completing its daily round. It was an astonishing example of a bird not only mimicking human behavior but applying it in a completely novel way.

All these experiences—whether personally witnessed or read—have taught me that crows are far more than scavengers in black. They are intelligent, observant, and capable of teamwork, mimicry, and even innovation. In a world constantly changing, they have adapted seamlessly, often outwitting both nature and humans in small but telling ways.

Their sense of community, their willingness to respond to collective danger, and their ability to learn from observation are qualities we humans can take inspiration from. In them, I see a reflection of society at its best—watchful, cooperative, and endlessly inventive.

As the Mahabharata wisely reminds us:

"Apadarthe dhanam rakṣed, dārān rakṣed dhanaiḥ sadā,
Ātmanam satataṁ rakṣed, dārair api dhanair api."

“In times of trouble, protect wealth; with wealth, protect your family. But always protect your self—even if it means giving up wealth and family.”

The crows, in their instinctive wisdom, seem to live by a similar code—risking all for their shared home and community, but always vigilant and strategic in preserving their kind.


4 comments:

G G Subhedar said...

What a topic this time.. A wonderful reminder of learning from nature.. Superb... ❤

samaranand's take said...

Thanks dear Subhedar for your observation!

विजय जोशी said...

A wonderful message of team work and togetherness in the moment of threat, which we indians lack totally.
Also an altogether new thought of wisdom through crow on personal, social or company front, which has been unknown till this contribution 🌷🙏🏽

Paritosh Pandit said...

We hitherto believed that only humans are highly collaborative species, with our success as a species often attributed to our ability to cooperate and form complex social structures, a trait that distinguishes us from other animals.

However, "Crows, known for their intelligence, also exhibit collaborative behaviors, including cooperative breeding where family members help raise young and defend territory, and mobbing predators, and even collaborate with other animals like wolves to find foods."

"Crows are also known for their intelligence and cleverness, with studies showing they can solve complex problems, use tools, and even remember human faces for years, demonstrating cognitive abilities comparable to a 7-year-old child."

Sir, your blog on Crows is a well-written narrative and message for us on the strength of togetherness and inclusivity in the society, especially at the time of intensive threat from the divisive forces.