walkon wrote:Each time it let rip with the kookaburra call the resident kookas all answered back.
vicrev wrote:The last time I heard a Lyrebird medley,he finished it off with a chainsaw imitation,made my day.......
So,what exactly are you saying,I did not hear it ?,I am imagining it?,I am telling porky pies ? David Attenborough as yet, does not have a copyright on noises birds/animals make......please explain........If it was a response in jest,fair enough, but,please do not make me a target of ridicule, if that was the intention........MickyB wrote:walkon wrote:Each time it let rip with the kookaburra call the resident kookas all answered back.vicrev wrote:The last time I heard a Lyrebird medley,he finished it off with a chainsaw imitation,made my day.......
I think the two of you have been watching the same David Attenborough doco![]()
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSB71jNq-yQ
Hope David Attenborough was there to witness it !.....juxtaposer wrote:I've heard lyre birds imitate chainsaws and bulldozers. Only a few days ago in the South East Forests National Park I heard (and saw) a male whip bird call, but I'm certain it was a lyre bird that responded because the female response was prefaced with the male call (that is to say that the same bird responded to the original call with both male and female calls). The male whip bird wasn't falling for it and took off in the opposite direction when eventually a female did respond.
Zone-5 wrote:amazing stuff!
walkon wrote:Certainly live up to their name at times.
vicrev wrote:Hope David Attenborough was there to witness it !.....
Orion wrote:I would love to see/hear one of these birds in person.
Where are a few good places to go to observe Lyre birds?
Are they difficult to find in Tasmania?
Was the release Tas gov sponsored,or just stupid people ?.....seems like it's the rabbit,fox,cane toad thing all over again ?.........Just curious..north-north-west wrote:Some idiots thought it would be a good idea to bring a few down here to 'add' to the island's attractiveness. Think they were only released at Mt Field, but they've spread. Mt Field is still the best chance of seeing one in Tassie. They tend to hang out in the forests in that area.
edit: Ohhh, and at Hastings as well. I think. Explains why they've popped up at Hartz.
vicrev wrote:Was the release Tas gov sponsored,or just stupid people ?.....seems like it's the rabbit,fox,cane toad thing all over again ?.........Just curious..north-north-west wrote:Some idiots thought it would be a good idea to bring a few down here to 'add' to the island's attractiveness. Think they were only released at Mt Field, but they've spread. Mt Field is still the best chance of seeing one in Tassie. They tend to hang out in the forests in that area.
edit: Ohhh, and at Hastings as well. I think. Explains why they've popped up at Hartz.
Introduced to Tasmania (then fox-free) primarily due to fears that foxes and habitat loss would cause species’ extinction on mainland.
In Tasmania, total of 22 lyrebirds released at Mt Field National Park from 1934–49 and at Hastings Caves in 1945.
jackhinde wrote:Have any of you Tasmanians heard a lyrebird imitate a whip bird? It has been claimed that the introduced lyrebirds have passed down this sound through generations without being exposed to this particular bird call.
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