A new research in Japan has indicated that crows are capable of distinguishing between men and women's faces.
The study involved experiments conducted on four jungle crows, the type most commonly found in Japanese cities and often regarded as an urban nuisance due to their booming population, reports the Telegraph.
After scientists showed the four crows a series of colour photographs of humans with their hair concealed, one pair was trained to pick men's faces and the other pair women's faces.
Image credit: Reuters
When the faces of other men and women were added and the positions of the faces shuffled, three of the four crows picked the correct faces with 100 per cent accuracy, and the fourth chose correctly seven times out of ten.
The study was masterminded by Bezawork Afework, 32, a doctoral student from Ethiopia based at the United Graduate School of Agricultural Science at Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology and Utsonomiya University.
Source: ANI