Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • We think of Birds-of-Paradise as these visual,

  • visually amazing creatures, but

  • they use sounds.

  • It’s a jungle out there.

  • When most people think of

  • Birds-of-Paradise or look at pictures of them or video, theyre not thinking about them

  • as being interesting acoustically.

  • But yet, when you step back and you

  • bother to pay attention to sounds of Birds-of-Paradise, you realize

  • that the kinds of sounds that the males make

  • in courtship, or prior to courtship, are nearly as phenomenal as the way that

  • they look and behave.

  • This usually is something that begins as a long-distance

  • way of attracting females to the display site, so males have a

  • vocalization – I always think of it as their primary vocalization

  • or their main territorial vocalization or their main advertisement vocalization.

  • And that's the one that we use even as researchers or scientists or birders

  • to locate them. It’s the most conspicuous thing that they do, and that’s by design.

  • That’s how the females find them as well.

  • Then in the process of courtship display,

  • there's a whole range of other sounds

  • that are also given

  • but they're much less conspicuous, much less commonly heard by us.

  • Sometime these are the same sounds

  • but much more commonly they're not, theyre a totally different set.

  • Just like all thirty-nine species look distinct, they do all sound distinct.

  • Now some of the ones that are more closely related that also look more similar,

  • they also sound more similar.

  • But when you find two species that look extremely different,

  • like a lot of Birds-of-Paradise do from one another,

  • they actually sound

  • as extremely different as they look.

  • Even though there's a

  • huge amount of diversity in the types of sounds Birds-of-Paradise make,

  • I would say most people

  • still think of them as being these more crow-likecaw caw cawkind of sounds.

  • And no doubt, a lot of species do make a plain,

  • not-that-interesting, sounding kind of crow-like, squawk.

  • Parotia’s do that, a handful of other things do that.

  • But, that being said,

  • the ones that do have interesting sounds, they sound

  • nothing at all like even a bird. In fact, many of them don't even sound

  • like things made by a living organism. They sound like a sound that would be

  • from a human machine.

  • Several good examples come to my mind as being the

  • classic or the best examples of those extreme sounds of Birds-of-Paradise.

  • The Brown Sicklebill, in particular,

  • makes this very non-bird-like machine gun sound.

  • Another one of the greatest sounds, is the male King-of-Saxony.

  • It gives this very unnatural sound that’s

  • just unlike anything you've heard before, certainly coming out of the mouth of a bird.

  • Then there are a number of species that are kind of reminiscent of a bird-like sound.

  • Some of these would be the

  • Curl-crested Manucode,

  • which in my mind often sounds a little bit like a UFO landing.

  • And then things like the Magnificent Riflebird,

  • which has a nice musical quality to it.

  • Even though it's called the riflebird, it doesn't sound

  • like a gun.

  • A handful of species have very conspicuous non-vocal sounds that they make,

  • usually in the context of close proximity display to a female.

  • The best examples of that

  • are the riflebirds. All three species, when they lift up their wings

  • and theyre moving them back and forth, and the males are usually hiding their head behind their wing.

  • All three of them have this sound that sounds like some kind of

  • rustling fabric or paper.

  • Swoosh, swoosh, back and forth, that moves with the wings and that's actually being

  • produced by the wings themselves, that’s not a vocal sound.

  • The Superb Bird-of-Paradise is another really great example

  • where during the main

  • display there's this snapping sound.

  • He's doing something with his wings and it looks like with his tail

  • where he’s moving them out quickly,

  • creating like a whip-like "snap".

  • I think the thing that I find the most

  • intriguing or interesting about

  • sounds of Bird-of-Paradise is that for

  • literally centuries, people have been so focused on the way that they look,

  • and that's obviously for good reasontheyre pretty awesome,

  • pretty extraordinary.

  • But sound is just another extreme thing, just like the colors and

  • the behaviors, in that

  • they've evolved as much diversity in the way that they use sound for courtship

  • and for attracting females,

  • as any other kind of ornament that Birds-of-Paradise have.

  • And that’s what really makes the sound

  • special in Birds-of-Paradise.

We think of Birds-of-Paradise as these visual,

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it