New Straits Times

Endangered Australian songbird ‘losing its song’

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Australia’s endangered regent honeyeater is losing its song, a sign that it could be nearing extinction, scientists warned in new research released yesterday.

A rapid decline in the rare songbird means its young are struggling to learn mating calls as adults disappear, according to researcher­s at the Australian National University.

Male regent honeyeater­s sang rich, complex tunes in more populated habitats, but resorted to simplified songs elsewhere, the scientists wrote in a study published in the peer-reviewed journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

Lead author Ross Crates said the findings were a “major warning sign the regent honeyeater is on the brink of extinction” — and the loss of song knowledge could also reduce chances of mating.

“It could also be exacerbati­ng the honeyeater’s population decline, because we know a sexy song increases the odds of reproducti­on in songbirds.”

Scientists found 18 regent honeyeater­s, or around 12 per cent of the total remaining male population, who could only mimic other species’ songs — not their own.

“This lack of ability to communicat­e with their own species is unpreceden­ted in a wild animal,” co-author Dejan Stojanovic said.

“We can assume that regent honeyeater­s are now so rare that some young males never find an older male teacher.”

Scientists estimate just a few hundred regent honeyeater­s remain in the wild.

The rare bird, with its black and yellow markings, was once found across much of eastern Australia, but is now largely confined to eucalyptus forests in the country’s southeast.

The study also found regent honeyeater­s born in captivity have different songs that could reduce their attractive­ness to wild birds.

The scientists hoped to teach the captive birds to sing like their wild counterpar­ts, by playing them audio recordings.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? A decline in Australia’s rare regent honeyeater is killing off the bird’s ‘song culture’, with its young struggling to learn mating calls.
AFP PIC A decline in Australia’s rare regent honeyeater is killing off the bird’s ‘song culture’, with its young struggling to learn mating calls.

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