often act as "anchors." Locate these names first to find answers related to specific experiments.

— Wild crows use tools to retrieve these from deep tree holes.

If you have been preparing for the IELTS Academic Reading test, you may have encountered a passage about "The Intelligence of Corvids." These birds—ravens, crows, magpies, and jays—are frequent stars of IELTS Reading sections because they challenge the traditional human-centric view of intelligence. The keyword search suggests that test-takers are not just looking for correct answers (the standard answer key) but for extra quality : deeper explanations, passage mapping strategies, and vocabulary builders.

Social intelligence is another hallmark. Corvids live in complex fission-fusion societies, remember human faces for years, and even appear to hold "funerals" for fallen flock members. Research on ravens ( Corvus corax ) indicates they can infer the social relationships of unseen competitors—a skill known as transitive inference. If raven A dominates raven B, and raven B dominates raven C, a raven can deduce that A dominates C without witnessing a fight. This requires a mental model of social hierarchies.

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