
Astonishingly, it is only a few decades since textbooks confidently proclaimed that humans were the only tool-making species. In 1960, Jane Goodall's ground-breaking reports of tool use amongst chimpanzees overthrew this theory, and today tool use is studied from dolphins to parrots, with crows revealing a sophistication that outshines many humans.
Fire propagation, however, is considered a bright line marking humans apart from animals. Except that is, by the fourteen rangers interviewed by Bob Gosford, and many Australian Aboriginal people in north-central Australia, who say birds use it too.
Gosford is a lawyer whose extensive work with Indigenous people in central Australia inspired an interest in their culture. In particular, Gosford became fascinated by Aboriginal knowledge of birds. He has done two years of a Masters degree on the topic at Charles Sturt University in New South Wales, Australia, and become a regular at scientific conferences on anthropology and ornithology.
Gosford started to hear reports of black kites(Milvus migrans)and brown falcons (Falco berigora)picking upsticks burning at one end and dropping them into unburnt territory. The accounts came both from Indigenous people in northern Australia and from non-indigenous firefighters, park rangers and people charged with conducting early dry season burns to prevent the build-up of flammable material.

The activity makes evolutionary sense, Gosford told IFLScience, because fires provide both species with a major food source. "Reptiles, frogs and insects rush out from the fire, and there are birds that wait in front, right at the foot of the fire, waiting to catch them," Gosford said. Small fires often attract so many birds that there is insufficient fleeing prey for all, so a bird that was being beaten to its lunch might benefit from starting a new fire with less competition.

Gosford hopes publicity will encourage anyone visiting relevant areas to keep cameras handy in the hope photographic evidence can confirm the behavior.



ground. I have seen them doing this.
I have not ever heard of them "spreading" the fire though.
Birds are a lot smarter than one thinks.
I half trained a falcon at work. Every morning it would be sitting on a certain light pole.
I would look around, and find a cricket or something for it. And throw it out in the street.
He soon associated me with bits of food, and would come a lot closer if I was there.
He left after nesting season, he was using the bugs, etc, to feed the 2 chicks they had.
Pravdaseeker