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Showing posts with label lyrebird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lyrebird. Show all posts

Monday, May 29, 2017

"Stealers of Sound"

"Stealers of Sound" sounds like a copyright issue over a pop song or illegal pirating of music.

Well the birds have been doing this for centuries apparently.

"Stealers of Sound" is a chapter in a book by the late A H(Alec) Chisholm , one of Australia's best earlier writers on birds and natural history.

The book is called "Bird Wonders" of Australia.

I have two editions.  1953(second edition), and 1952(fifth edition).

I am sure you can still pick these up in used book shops.

The chapter on this topic is talking about birds who mimic the calls of other birds.

The most well known in Australia is the Lyre Bird but many others do the same.

Chisholm wrote a wonderful book called "The Romance of the Lyrebird" where the habits and details of this bird are brilliantly written,.

Also I have written on this blog about "The Lore of the Lyrebird" by Ambrose Pratt.

The Mocking Bird overseas is famous for it's mimicry also and many other overseas birds do the same.

So here are some "stealers" that Chisholm talks about.

At the time of writing his 5th edition he claims that there were no fewer than 52 species in Australia that do this.

Below are some he mentions in the book.

The Lyrebird
The Spotted Bower Bird
The Golden Bower Bird and he says 8 species that construct bowers or "playing places" have the gift of mimicry.
The Toothbilled Catbird
Silvereye
Male Mistetoebird
Brown Thornbill
Heathwren
Yellow Throated Scrubwren
Rufous Scrub-bird
Whipbird
Olive-backed Oriole
Pied Butcher Bird
Starling(not a native bird)

I googled the subject of "Australian Birds that mimic others" and came up with the link below which also aludes to Chisholm's work.

Some more information can be found there.

http://theconversation.com/the-mimics-among-us-birds-pirate-songs-for-personal-profit-30195

For me, I like trying to imitate bird calls, my favourite being the Kookaburra.

I was photographing one in a park recently and I decided to do a mock call so he would turn his head and I would get a better shot.

It worked!







Alec Chisholm says the Kookaburra, in the early days of Australian settlement was called the "Giant Kingfisher" and then became the "Laughing Jackass" and the "Settlers Clock".  "Kookaburra" became its widely accepted name from an Aboriginal language.
Chisholm gives 45 other Aboriginal names used by different tribes for the same bird.
He says that is not an exhaustive list.

If you want to just listen to beautiful sounds of Australian Birds go to "Listening Earth"

https://geoffthompsonsblog.blogspot.com.au/2017/05/listening-earth-new-venture.html



Wednesday, March 22, 2017

James the Lyrebird





I love finding old books in bookshops that highlight Australia's Fauna and Flora and the many past authors who investigated Australia's wonderful diversity of Animals,Birds and Plant Life.

I found one such book the other day called the "The Lore of the Lyrebird" by Ambrose Pratt.
In it I found the wonderful story of Edith Wilkinson and "James" the wild Lyrebird she befriended.

James became a celebrity in his day and you can find many references on the internet including
the short film in the link below.

As yet I have never had the pleasure to photograph a Lyrebird and have had one fleeting glimpse of one on Mt Buffalo in Victoria.

A children's book has also been written based on the story by Jackie Kerin.

Here below is Jackie telling the story on youtube.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7H7drsjvxg

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Loved lyrebird dies

From local ABC News bulletin.
 
 

Loved lyrebird dies

Updated December 29, 2011 22:18:47
Adelaide Zoo's much loved lyrebird Chook, known for his stunning vocal ability, has died at the age of 32.
Chook became a YouTube star after he was filmed imitating the sounds of construction work, which he probably picked up as the zoo's panda enclosure was being built in 2009.
The sounds of drills, hammers and saws were all within his range and the performance attracted more than a million hits.
The master mimic was also known for his impressions of other birds, including the magpie, lorikeet and kookaburra.
Chook had been at the zoo for 20 years, arriving from the Healesville Sanctuary.
Adelaide Zoo's Brett Backhouse was Chook's keeper for 11 years and says 32 is a good age for a lyrebird.
"We believe that he's probably one of the older lyrebirds ever to be kept or that was known around the place," he said.
"We noticed that he looked a little bit off-colour only a day or two beforehand and then he was unfortunately found dead so it was a bit of a shock.
"He was hand raised so he was quite human habituated. That sort of gave him some special abilities as well. He was a lot braver with humans because he was so used to them.
"The public could get close and see him doing his thing really easily whereas ones in the wild will be very shy by nature."

Irreplaceable

Lyrebirds are well known for their ability to imitate the sounds of the world around them.
"It's part of their courtship that they perform. Ones out in the wild in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland will mimic whatever they can find and they use it to attract a female and sort of show how clever they are," Mr Backhouse said.
"We're still getting used to the fact that the aviary's very, very quiet."
He says the zoo has three other lyrebirds, but none are as vocal as Chook.
Old age is believed to be the cause of Chook's death but the zoo has performed a post-mortem to be sure.
Lyrebirds are so-called because their tail feathers resemble the lyre, an ancient musical instrument.
Sir David Attenborough brought them to a global audience when he featured a lyrebird imitating a chainsaw, camera shutters and a car alarm in his 'Life of Birds' series.
It was voted the British public's 'Favourite Attenborough Moment' in a television poll.
First posted December 29, 2011 09:58:10