Egyptian vultures use rocks to break open ostrich eggs


Scientists have made the following observations:
Egyptian vultures use rocks to break open ostrich eggs, which they then eat.
A vulture may search as far as 50 m away from an ostrich egg for an appropriate rock (which is generally egg-shaped) to use to break the egg. The vulture then throws the rock at the egg until the egg cracks.
This same rock-throwing behavior also occurs in young captive-hatched birds that have not been exposed to rock-throwing adults. However, these naive vultures had to learn that the ostrich eggs were a source of food.
Some scientists theorize that this behavior developed from the tactic of throwing smaller eggs to break them open. Ostrich eggs, however, are too big to pick up and throw, so perhaps the rock-throwing technique evolved in the vultures. This could explain why vultures choose rocks that are egg-shaped, rather than ones that are jagged or irregular.

Based on the scientists' observations and your knowledge of animal behavior, which of the following statements are true?
Select all that apply.
Pecking at eggs to break them open is an example of tool use.
Rock-throwing in vultures is an innate behavior.
Egyptian vultures must imprint on their own species in order to crack eggs using rocks.
In Egyptian vultures, eating ostrich eggs is a learned behavior.
Examining the anatomical mechanism that enables Egyptian vultures to throw rocks relates to proximate causation.
The shape of the rock that the vultures choose is modified by their experience.
Questioning whether the rock-throwing behavior arose from egg-throwing relates to ultimate causation. 

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Biology: Egyptian vultures use rocks to break open ostrich eggs
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