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The Hawaiian crow is ‘very intelligent’ — however hawks keep assaulting it

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Plans to repopulate Hawaii’s forests with its “very intelligent” crows have actually been overthrown in part by its natural predator, the Hawaiian hawk. Now researchers are tracking the hawk in order to save the corvids.

(Illustration by Emily Sabens/The Washington Post; Eric J. Franke for The Washington Post; iStock)

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FERN ACRES, Hawaii — Amy Durham wound the straps under the wing, over the wing, under the other wing, over the other wing, making sure the backpack-like device stays comfortably strapped to the Hawaiian hawk for many months.

“This may be your best work yet,” said Diego Johnson, one of her colleagues holding the straps on the chocolate-colored hawk’s chest as Durham protected a light-weight GPS transmitter to its back.

These San Diego Zoo scientists are travelling around the mountainous jungles of Hawaii’s Big Island not simply to comprehend the ‘io, one of the state’s just birds of victim, which is considered at risk. It’s vital, too, for bring back a much more threatened bird types — the ‘alalā, or Hawaiian crow.

Known for its problem-solving abilities, the Hawaiian crow is one of the most remarkable bird species in the world. The ‘alalā, whose name means to “yell” in the local language, is one of the only birds in the world known to naturally use — and even make — its own tools.

Yet this distinctive crow that many dub “very intelligent” has been extinct in the wild for two decades, with the only about 120 alive in human care today.

So far, plans to repopulate Hawaii’s forests with its native crows have actually been overthrown in part by the ‘io. The hawks are the crows’ natural predator, and have actually followed the corvids throughout previous reintroduction efforts.

By tracking the hawks, researchers with the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance and Hawaii’s Department of Land and Natural Resources are attempting to find out where it is best to reestablish the crows so they can once again flourish in the wild. At the heart of their research study is a riddle: How do you safeguard 2 uncommon birds when one keeps assaulting the other?

“They’ve coexisted for many, many, many years,” said Bryce Masuda, preservation program supervisor for the zoo. Now his group is attempting to get these 2 bird types discovered no place else on Earth to exist side-by-side once again.

Bringing back a ‘family god’

Ever because individuals entered the Hawaiian island chain, people have actually been enthralled by the islands’ crows.

Its shiny black plumes decorated Native Hawaiian bathrobes. Its enforcing beak and piercing eyes led some households to concern the ‘alalā as a manifestation of an ‘aumakua, or “family god” that watches over them.

When Capt. James Cook arrived in Hawaii in 1778, many murders of crows stalked the islands’ volcanic hillsides.

Over the centuries, a range of elements — illness, damage of forests for farming and livestock ranching and predation by cats and other nonnative animals — conspired to drive the crow’s population down.

By 1992, there were just 13 ‘alalā in Hawaii’s forests. The last wild ones were identified a years later on. The just ‘alalā known to exist today live in a pair of breeding centers run by the San Diego Zoo on the Big Island and Maui.

A picture of one of the survivors caught the attention of Christian Rutz, a behavioral ecologist at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.

For more than a decade, he had studied a different corvid species called the New Caledonian crow. Without any training, chicks in New Caledonia, a French territory in the South Pacific, pick up sticks to collect grubs from crevices. At the time, no other crow was known to naturally use tools.

But Rutz suspected there were others. When he saw the Hawaiian crow’s straight beak and forward-facing eyes — functions ideal for holding and controling branches — he telephoned the San Diego Zoo’s bird preservation center.

A manager told him the Hawaiian crows were always flying around with sticks in their bills. Rutz was stunned. “I booked myself pretty much onto the next flight to Hawaii,” he said.

Hawaiian crows from the Keauhou Bird Conservation Center in Hawaii use sticks as tools to retrieve food from small holes and crevices. (Video: San Diego Zoo Global)

In a paper published in the journal Nature in 2016 and subsequent research, Rutz, Masuda and others showed Hawaiian crows did more than pick up sticks to dig out morsels of food from logs.

The crows also manufactured their own tools — shortening sticks or stripping them of bark to make them fit better into tight, grub-filled crannies. “They will shape the right tool for the right job,” Durham said.

Living on isolated islands without much competition for insects, the two crow species likely evolved their dexterity with branches independently of each other.

“They were just incredibly slick,” Rutz said.

‘No other bird like it’

At the zoo’s bird preservation center in Maui, a pair of ‘alalā awaiting reintroduction hopped from perch to perch on a recent day in their enclosures, landing with a thud. The birds flexed their tufts and ogled their human handlers with big, expressive eyes.

“There’s no other bird like it,” Masuda said.

Beginning in 2016, biologists tried to bring the ‘alalā back to the wild. Yet of the 30 released, 25 died or went missing. The other five were recaptured.

“There’s not one clear reason why the birds failed to thrive,” Masuda said. Some vanished without a trace while others succumbed to an untimely storm.

And then there was the hawk. Before releasing them, biologists trained the captive ‘alalā to avoid ‘io. In the wild, some of the released crows protected themselves by ganging up on aggressive ‘io. But other crows were predated by the hawks.

To tag the highly territorial hawks with GPS trackers in their renewed effort to reintroduce the crow, the San Diego Zoo team boomed the raptor’s namesake “eeeh-oh” screech from a portable loudspeaker.

Once a hawk was lured to a nearby perch, the team placed a ring-shaped wire cage with a mouse inside. Thinking it had a free meal, a hawk swooped in — and got its talons caught in plastic loops atop the trap.

“It’s actually an old falconry technique,” said Johnson, a biologist with the zoo who helped design the device.

After capturing the chocolate-colored male in December, Johnson held out each wing to measure the length, turned the bird over to look at its tail plumage and gently felt the muscle on the sternum.

“This is a very healthy bird,” he concluded.

On Johnson’s phone is a map lit up with blue, green and magenta dots — each the location of some of the 41 other previously tagged ‘io. Gaps show areas where they have yet to catch a hawk. Around the ankle of the most recently captured hawk the team placed a band bearing the number “42.”

The lightweight, solar-powered transmitters on each bird’s back ping nearby cell towers with latitude, longitude, altitude and other data multiple times a day. The contraption is secured with a single stitch so that it falls off harmlessly in about two years. At a cost of more than $1,000 a unit, someone will eventually have to fetch each transmitter.

“I can literally sit in the comfort of my air-conditioned office in San Diego and download the location data from each bird remotely,” said James Sheppard, an ecologist with the zoo. “It’s fair to say we’re in the golden age of wildlife tracking.”

Already the research study has revealed some ‘io have much larger territories than others. One idea to reduce the chance of an ‘alalā encountering an ‘io in the wild is to place the crows near hawks with a lot of ground to cover.

But Masuda, the head of the conservation program, cautioned: “If we knew what they need to thrive, we would have released them a long time ago.”

With its backpack secure, the hawk got a middle-seat car ride to be released where it was first captured — and fill in another spot on the scientists’ map.

As Durham prepared to let it go, “42” looked at her with its saucer eyes. She raised her hand to move the bird’s attention toward a close-by stand of trees — and release.

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