Wednesday, 28 February 2024
Meet the Great Bowerbird, your March Bird of the Month. Here are 5 things you may or may not know about these weird and wonderful illusionists.
With their cryptic grey-brown and white scalloped plumage, Great Bowerbirds can disappear in plain sight. But if their large bower doesn’t betray their presence, their distinctive calls probably will.
Male Great Bowerbirds are especially vocal during breeding season, and their extensive repertoire includes a mechanical hissing, harsh churring, loud cackling and chattering sounds. They’re also accomplished mimics of other birds and environmental sounds – and are even known to mimic the calls of potential predators when approached at their nest or bowers.
Like other bowerbird species, male Great Bowerbirds go to great lengths to impress a potential mate.
He builds his own theatre to perform in – an intricate bower made out of twigs and a surrounding ‘courtyard’.
He decorates his bower with pale-coloured, green and sometimes red and shiny objects, including bones, pebbles, snail shells and green fruits and leaves. A single bower may contain thousands of objects!
Males will collect artificial objects too, and their bowers often reflect their surroundings. In Townsville, a bower in a cemetery was decorated with marble chips from nearby graves, while another at a university campus was decorated with pens, paper clips and other stationery.
Males build their bowers under shrubs and foliage and often close to human habitation – including in urban parks and gardens, schools and rural properties. They are inquisitive birds and often unafraid of humans, and are even known to enter homes in search of food and decorations to steal!
You’ve heard of a bird’s eye view, but did you know some birds create their own optical illusions?
The male Great Bowerbird carefully arranges each object very carefully according to their size, so that the smallest items are closest to the entrance of the bower and the largest are further away. This creates an optical illusion – the objects all look like the same size, making him appear bigger than he really is.
If his magic act lands, the female Great Bowerbird will approach the bower and stay for the show. To win her over, he struts noisily about, flashing his brilliant bubble-gum pink crest and flicking his tongue while waving colourful objects at her in his beak.
Since male Great Bowerbirds spend most of their time building, refurbishing or decorating their bowers, they’re fiercely protective of their creations. And for good reason! Like other bowerbird species, marauding males will attempt to destroy each other’s bowers and steal decorations for their own bowers – sabotaging their chances with other females to increase their own breeding success.
Satin Bowerbirds are renowned for decorating their bowers with all manner of blue objects collected from the vicinity of the bower
Spotted Bowerbirds have bold rich-buff spots on a pale brown mantle/wings/rump, and a pink crest on their nape.
The Paradise Riflebird is a medium-sized, long-billed riflebird without plumes. The adult male is velvety black with a metallic oil-green sheen to crown.
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