These Birds Have A Mental Map Of Every Wolf Kill in Yellowstone In A Nutshell Ravens don’t follow wolves to find food.
A new study finds Yellowstone’s ravens don’t just follow wolves but use mental “maps” to predict likely kill sites. Researchers say the birds’ memory ...
Green Matters on MSN
Scientists tracked ravens trailing Yellowstone wolves. Turns out, they're doing more than scavenging
Researchers suspect that ravens might have greater agendas behind their relationship with wolves.
Ravens have long been thought to follow wolves to find food, but new research shows they’re far more strategic. By tracking both animals in Yellowstone, scientists discovered that ravens memorize ...
Learn how ravens in Yellowstone National Park use spatial memory and navigation to locate wolf kills across the landscape without following wolves.
The partnership between ravens and wolves goes back to Norse mythology – Odin's birds scouted ahead and led prey to the god's canines, a relationship that provided food for all.
New research shows ravens do not follow wolves to find food. Instead, they remember hunting areas and return later.
For decades, scientists assumed they knew how ravens always managed to show up at a wolf kill before the blood had even dried ...
Wolf packs often turn out to be bigger than predicted by the theories of animal behaviorists, and a new analysis points to a previously underappreciated factor: the scrounging genius of ravens.
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