this bird could soon become extinct,
and the reason the regent honeyeater, (Xanthomyza phrygia), photograph Jss367/Wikimedia Commons, is going extinct is so weird, the males have forgotten how to sing! as their numbers started dwindling, ornithologists started noticing the complexity in their mating calls diminishing, to the point where male regent honeyeaters didn’t even
sound like their species anymore, at one
point, Australian ornithologists noticed that male regent honeyeaters
were imitating the songs of other bird species, like friarbirds,
currawongs and cuckooshrikes, but they offered no explanation as to why that
was happening. Some experts believed that the mimicry was considered a
deliberate strategy to avoid getting attacked by the larger birds, however, a recent study showed otherwise, “The poor
birds are not getting the chance to to learn what they should be singing,” said
Dr Ross Crates, an ecologist at the Fenner School of Environment and author of
the study. “They don’t get the chance to hang around with other honeyeaters and
learn what they’re supposed to sound like.”
flocks
of hundreds of regent honeyeaters could once be spotted all over south-eastern
Australia on a regular basis, but today the species is critically endangered,
with only 300 specimens believed to exist in the entire world, apparently young
regent honeyeaters learn their songs from adult members of their species, just
like human children learn to speak, but because they are spread so thin in
their habitat, many males don’t get to listen to the right songs, so they start
adopting the tunes of other bird species. The problem is that these aren’t the
songs female regent honeybirds want to hear, so their chances of finding a mate
are very slim,
“They’re so
rare and the area they could occupy is so big – probably 10 times the size of
the UK – that we were looking for a needle in a haystack,” Dr Crates told
the BBC. “So they end up learning the songs of other species.” Crates and
his team set out not to investigate the songs of the regent honeyeaters, but to
find specimens in the wild, which proved a massive challenge. But it was during
their searches that they found honeybirds that “didn’t sound anything like a
regent honeyeater”, but as different bird species. according
to this newly published study, the natural song of the regent honeyeater has
essentially “disappeared” in at least 12% of the population, and considering
the size of that population (around 300 specimens), that is a huge concern, scientists
are no planning to put captured males that can sing in aviaries next to
captive-bred regent honeyeaters so that the juveniles can learn the right song.
They then plan to release them into the wild every few years, where they will
hopefully be able to attract females and reproduce, “This study
shows how damaging population declines and habitat fragmentation might be to
this critical process in the life of songbirds,” said Dr Sue Anne Zollinger, an
expert in animal communication from Manchester Metropolitan University, of all of the reasons for a species going extinct, not knowing how to sing is the least likely reason I can think of!
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