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Scrub-birds are shy, secretive, ground-dwelling birds of the family Atrichornithidae. There
are just two species, one of them rare and very restricted in its range, the other so
rare that until 1961 it was thought to be extinct. Both are native to Australia.
The scrub-bird family is ancient and is understood to be most closely related to the lyrebirds, and probably also the bowerbirds and treecreepers. All four families originated with the great
corvid radiation of the
Australia-New Guinea region.
Both living species are about the same size as a Common Starling
(roughly 20 cm long) and cryptically coloured in drab browns and blacks. They occupy dense undergrowth—the Rufous Scrub-bird in temperate rain forests near the Queensland-New South Wales border, the
Noisy Scrub-bird in
heaths and scrubby gullies in semi-arid Western
Australia—and are adept at scuttling mouse-like under cover to avoid notice. They run fast but their flight is
feeble.
The males' calls, however, are powerful: ringing and metallic, with a ventriloquial quality, so loud as to be heard from a
long distance in heavy scrub and almost painful at close range. Females build a domed nest close to the ground and take sole
responsibility for raising the young.
The entire world population of the Noisy Scrub-bird was estimated at 40 to 45 birds in 1962. Conservation efforts succeeded in
increasing the population to around 400 birds by the mid-1980s, and they have
subsequently been reintroduced to several sites, but remain endangered.
- ORDER PASSERIFORMES
- (many other families)
- Family Atrichornithidae
- Rufous Scrub-bird,
Atrichornis rufescens
- Noisy Scrub-bird,
Atrichornis clamosus
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