News
13d
Study Finds on MSNModern Hunter: This Young Hawk Learned To Use Traffic Lights To Find PreyIn a nutshell A young Cooper’s hawk in New Jersey learned to use pedestrian crossing signals, specifically their sounds, as ...
Dr Vladimir Dinets, a zoologist who studies animal behavior, ecology, and conservation, is the author of a recently published ...
A University of Tennessee researcher documented an immature Cooper's hawk using vehicle traffic and pedestrian signal ...
The bird—a young Cooper’s hawk, to be exact—wasn’t using the crosswalk, in the sense of treading on the painted white stripes ...
8d
Boing Boing on MSNBird brain - clever New Jersey hawk uses crosswalk signal in hunting strategyMotor vehicles are among the top five causes of bird death in the United States, killing about 200 million birds in ...
14d
IFLScience on MSNClever Hawk Spotted Using Pedestrian Crossing To Catch Prey In New JerseyThe Cooper’s hawk Dinets spotted on his commute was, in that sense at least, not unusual. But it was the particular technique ...
15d
Interesting Engineering on MSNRed light, green light, strike: City hawk times its kill with traffic signal beepsA recent study documents a young Cooper’s hawk learning to use pedestrian crossing signals and idling traffic as cover for ambush hunting.
14d
ZME Science on MSNA Hawk in New Jersey Figured Out Traffic Signals and Used Them to HuntOne winter morning in suburban New Jersey, Vladimir Dinets stopped at a red light — and saw something he couldn’t believe.
A young Cooper’s hawk used traffic signals and parked cars to outwit its prey, revealing surprising intelligence in urban ...
Berly McCoy and Regina Barber of Short Wave talk about a hawk's clever hunting strategy ... I've read all about this young Cooper's hawk in New Jersey. Set the scene for us.
According to Dinets, goshawks seem to have adopted the same technique after observing them. In South America, several vulture ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results