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(16,878 posts)
Tue Sep 23, 2025, 02:40 PM Tuesday

How to Troll a Corvid Lover

https://corvidresearch.blog/2015/01/31/how-to-troll-a-corvid-lover/

January 31, 2015 · 6:13 pm

How to troll a corvid lover

In general, I find that crow people are lovely, and easy to get along with folk. There are, however, two widely shared images that have proven themselves an effective trigger to turn an otherwise gentle corvid lover into a foaming at the mouth fact checker. I say that as someone who has found themselves on the foaming end of that equation over some social media perpetuated misinformation on many occasions. In the wealth of silly nonsense posts a person could manufacture on corvids, why these are the two images that have become so ubiquitous on social media is a mystery to me. Maybe it’s because people genuinely enjoy the narratives they offer, or have no reason to be suspicious of the images because they’re just beginning to learn about crow biology. Or maybe some people know exactly what they’re doing and are just trolling to, ahem, ruffle a few feathers.

Either way, consider the following two images debunked. So rest easy fellow fact checkers, until of course you see them posted again. Probably tomorrow.

Myth: The infamous “baby crow”


These are not baby crows


I blame this one on BuzzFeed. In what was trying to be a cool post on crows, but really turned out to be just riddled with terrible photo choices, they start off with one of these pictures as evidence for how cute baby crows are (despite photos of very obviously different looking actual baby crow further down the in the same post!). Since BuzzFeed ranks one of the more trafficked sites on the internet, searching “baby crow” brings up the photo attached to the story.

Fact: Those cute fluffy babies are actually a variety of baby rails, including a corncrake. Notice how feathery and soft they look, like a baby duck or chicken? That’s because there are basically two strategies for how young are born. They can be altricial, which means you’re born naked and blind (i.e helpless) or precocial, which means you’re born fully feathered or furred and are ready to go from day one.


Actual baby crow.

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