Abstract

Being able to make and use tools was once considered to be an evolutionary hallmark of our species, but has since been documented in other animals. However, for reasons that remain unclear, not all species naturally use tools. Racoons (Procyon lotor) are generalist carnivores that possess many of the physical, cognitive, and behavioural characteristics linked to tool use in other species (e.g. manual dexterity, tactile exploration, relatively large brains, extractive foraging, and sociality). Although raccoons have not been observed using tools outside of experimental captive conditions, wild data involving objective psychometric tests are needed. The current study administered a tool-related task to a wild population of raccoons from 20 locations within the Croatan National Forest, USA. The task required participants to use a stick to extract food from a pipe. To facilitate interpretations of their performances on the task, data were obtained on natural tool availability at the field site and participants’ mode of exploring the novel task. None of the participants solved the task despite natural sticks (suitable for solving the task) being widely available across testing locations. Participants were equally likely to smell versus handle novel sticks, which were provided at testing platforms. Limited tactile exploration, but not tool availability, could be at least one factor that reduces these raccoons’ opportunities to interact with and learn about novel tools like sticks.

Highlights

  • Tools and other technologies have enabled humans to thrive in some of the harshest environments on the planet, explore the deepest regions of outer space, and put astronauts on the moon

  • Captive raccoons do not spontaneously use tools to solve tasks, but under experimental conditions, they can use inanimate objects to manipulate their environment to achieve a goal, thereby demonstrating that raccoons are capable of tool use (Stanton et al 2017)

  • The Croatan National Forest, which is located on the coast of North Carolina (N34° 51.624′ W77° 03.165′), was established in 1936 as a multi-use US National Forest

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Summary

Introduction

Tools and other technologies have enabled humans to thrive in some of the harshest environments on the planet, explore the deepest regions of outer space, and put astronauts on the moon. Until the 1960s, scientists believed that being able to make and use inanimate objects as tools to manipulate the environment and achieve a goal was one of the defining characteristics that separated our species from other animals (Oakley 1944; Leakey 1961). Such abilities have since been documented throughout the animal kingdom, challenging notions of what it means to be a "cognitively advanced" and "technically intelligent" species (Beck 1980; Seed and Byrne 2010; Bentley-Condit and Smith 2010).

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