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Bear Uses Rock As Tool For Scratching Face, Photo Shows

Bear

First Posted: 03/ 5/2012 8:38 am Updated: 03/ 5/2012 8:38 am

By: Jennifer Welsh, LiveScience Staff Writer
Published: 03/03/2012 11:33 AM EST on LiveScience

In July 2010, a brown bear had an itch. To scratch it, he picked up a barnacle-covered rock and rubbed it over his muzzle.

Volker Deecke, a researcher at the University of Cumbria in the United Kingdom, happened to be watching at the edge of Glacier Bay, in Alaska, when he observed this, the first known example of tool use by a brown bear.

"The bear started picking up rocks from the seafloor and manipulating them with his hands and eventually just scratching his face using this rock," Deecke told Livescience.

While brown bears (Ursus arctos) have been observed using trees and boulders to scratch parts of their bodies, picking up a rock and using it as a tool to scratch takes a different thought process. "That boulder remains, physically speaking, part of the environment," Deecke said. "To use a tool like this [rock], the animal needs to have the ability to extend the boundaries of its body."

Apparently brown bears are able to wrap their minds around this idea, Deecke said, adding, "that's something that we just didn't know about bears."

This is the series of images Volker Deecke, a researcher from the University of Cumbria in the United Kingdom, captured in Alaska in 2010. The bear fishes a rock out of the stream, positions it in his hand, then rubs it against his face and muzzle. Then, whoops, drops it again.


A bear's story

Deecke was in Alaska in the summer of 2010 for an unrelated project — he actually studies whales, not bears — when locals told him about an old whale carcass that had washed up on the bank of the West arm of Glacier Bay, which would be a good place to watch for bears. [Gallery: Swimming Polar Bears]

Two young adult bears were playing on the beach and eating the rotting whale carcass for about an hour as Deecke watched. After a while, one of the bears went into the water to play and started digging around on the seafloor. He brought a rock up, positioned it in his hands and rubbed it on his face. In images Deecke took, he was able to see the rock was covered in barnacles.

This wild bear, which had never been in captivity or around humans, was performing this tool-use grooming behavior completely unprompted. He repeated the rock scratching three times, with three different barnacle-covered rocks.

Animal tool use

Tool use is common in primates and several species of fish use tools, and many birds and invertebrates too, but only a few examples are known from non-primate mammals. Sea otters use rocks to get at the meaty goodness inside clams and urchins. Elephants use branches they've plucked to swat flies from parts of their body they can't reach.

Since this is only a single example of bear tool use, researchers don't know how frequent or widespread it is. More research is needed to figure out how smart brown bears actually are, and how they match up with other animals, particularly other mammals.

"There's a real need to do more systematic research on their behavior and bear cognition in particular," Deecke said. "There's more going on with these animals than I think we are aware of right now."

The study was published Feb. 25 in the journal Animal Cognition.

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: Jennifer Welsh, LiveScience Staff Writer Published: 03/03/2012 11:33 AM EST on LiveScience In July 2010, a brown bear had an itch. To scratch it, he picked up a barnacle-covered rock and rub...
By: Jennifer Welsh, LiveScience Staff Writer Published: 03/03/2012 11:33 AM EST on LiveScience In July 2010, a brown bear had an itch. To scratch it, he picked up a barnacle-covered rock and rub...
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07:58 AM on 03/07/2012
Could he use the rock to open a picnic basket? hey boo boo!!
03:39 PM on 03/06/2012
"Are we not men???!!!!"
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TC Ragstix
just a songwriter
01:47 AM on 03/06/2012
I thought bears used sticks to get bugs out of rotted logs and holes in trees?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gas-Bag
There's nothing endearing about perfection.
07:47 PM on 03/05/2012
Using a rock with barnacles on it to scratch an itch, ouch !!
jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
06:48 PM on 03/05/2012
forget everything else it's the animal up rising ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
06:48 PM on 03/05/2012
i'm afraid of bear's
05:38 PM on 03/05/2012
Oh crap i thought that was a smartphone that the bear was holding.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fran Jaime
Yo Soy 132!
11:16 PM on 03/05/2012
It is! It's a new Irock. very popular among cool bears!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Faisel
mrfaisel34
05:26 PM on 03/05/2012
Are bears the next species to rule the earth?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brutusmojo
live w/motherearthnot juston her
04:51 PM on 03/05/2012
I've always known animals to be smarter than we give them credit for.My Great Danes proved this many times over.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Faisel
mrfaisel34
05:26 PM on 03/05/2012
They are.
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davyjones2112
Top o' the world ma !!
04:19 PM on 03/05/2012
Knows better than to scratch it's face with it's claws. Probably too sharp.
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onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
03:42 PM on 03/05/2012
The first of many steps toward the right to 'bear' arms.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris1962
NYC
02:43 PM on 03/05/2012
>>>This wild bear, which had never been in captivity or around humans, was performing this tool-use grooming behavior completely unprompted.>>>

Wow, intelligent humans are finding out that animals are intelligent too. Doesn't take humans TOO long to catch on.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:31 PM on 03/05/2012
Up until the 18th century this would not have surprised anyone. Then pseudo-scientists started their disinformation campaign about how animals had no intelligence, no ability to feel pair or fear, etc. This allowed them to torture animals without being "troubled" by any human feelings. Anyone who said that animals could think or feel emotions was accused of "anthropomorphizing".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris1962
NYC
03:45 PM on 03/05/2012
>>>Then pseudo-scientists started their disinformation campaign about how animals had no intelligence>>>

And the Darwinian disinformation campaign about "natural slection" requiring no presence of intelligence rages on to this day, despite our having discovered that the entire process takes place within DNA's code/programming.

If any scientists out there would like to save some research dollars figuring out if dogs are intelligent, swing by my place and watch my dachshund remove his annoying e-collar with his front paws, or use his rawhide chewey bone to undo the snaps.
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doodlebug2
12:51 PM on 03/05/2012
I saw a beaver use a chain saw.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whirlpool
founder walnut tree congregation
12:22 PM on 03/05/2012
Last summer I saw a robin using a tool. It picked up a twig in its beak and was using it to pry and earthworm out of the soil.
11:54 AM on 03/05/2012
he's smarter than the average bear!