• 27/06/2022
  • By wizewebsite
  • 589 Views

Surgotes as a cut child.The bird from Australia can perfectly imitate even alarm<

Lyrochvost is a kind of Australian bird that can imitate many sounds with incredible credibility.In its natural environment, it shows most at the time of mating, when females attract their singing concert.His singing could be described as a mix of all the possible tones he has caught in his forest, and then as a musician composes or interprets in his own processing.

This Australian bird can also be seen in the area of the Zoo in Sydney.The seven -year -old male Echo has long been one of the greatest extroverts of the flocks, but finally he figured out how to get through the animals and get the attention of his breeders.With complete accuracy he learned to imitate the scream of an unfortunate baby.

In a video filmed by one of the breeders, the bird cries so that it hurts ears.According to Leanne Golebiowská from the zoo, the bird had to learn the sound a year ago, because the area has been closed for several months due to Lockdown.

Vříská jako ubrečené dítě. Pták z Austrálie umí dokonale napodobit třeba i alarm

"I suppose he had learned crying from our little visitors. At the time of the pandemic, he probably trained him and made it to perfection. I am a little worried about the crying because I thought our visitors were happy with us," she told the British newspaper The Guardian.

The breeder points out that Echo has two more sounds in reserve, which he caught in the area."One is the vibrations of electric drills that interpret it scary accurately, the other sounds are the tones of our fire alarm. He even knows 'evacuate' the voice challenge."

According to Dr. Alex Maisey of the University of Sydney, Australian birds must have admirable memory."They also have their own songs that accompany dance. It is clear that if the male has a constant supply of food, it is more time to improve the imitation of surrounding sounds," says ECHA.

The Australian bird and its imitation in nature were documented years ago by the team of David Attenborough, when he found a male imitating sound -cyanmon saw, alarm alarm or camera shutter near civilization.Most birds of this kind, however, do not have a repertoire.

"After all, it would be a little strange if he did not learn some of the human sounds in the zoo, where there is a very limited selection," says breeder Leanne Golebiowski.In the wild, sounds are able to catch even females, but they choose rather tones that imitate dangerous predators.They then use them to protect the nest.