Kaeli Swift will discuss corvid behavior at the Olympic Natural Resources Center in Forks on Friday. Olympic Natural Resources Center

Kaeli Swift will discuss corvid behavior at the Olympic Natural Resources Center in Forks on Friday. Olympic Natural Resources Center

WEEKEND: Talk tonight in Forks to focus on crows’ grief for their own

NOTE: “Today” and “tonight” refer to Friday, Nov. 6.

FORKS — A talk on crow “funeral” behavior by doctoral student Kaeli Swift will take place in the Hemlock Forest Room at the Olympic Natural Resources Center at 7 p.m. today.

The center is located at 1455 S. Forks Ave.

Swift works under the guidance of Dr. John Marzluff, professor of wildlife-habitat relationships, avian social ecology and demography at the University of Washington’s School of Environmental and Forest Sciences.

Her research follows long-reported observations of corvids (jays, magpies, crows and ravens) vocalizing and gathering around their fallen comrades and having ritual-like “funerals.”

The basis for her research is that crows, like a number of other animals including some primates, elephants, dolphins and other corvids, appear to perform funeral behaviors once they discover a dead member of their own species.

It is Swift’s hope that her team’s research will provide a more compassionate lens with which to understand crows and contribute to a growing movement of corvid enthusiasts.

Refreshments will be served, and a potluck of a favorite dessert is encouraged.

For more information, phone Frank Hanson at 360-374-4556 or email fsh2@uw.edu.

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