Regent honeyeater songbird that’s ‘forgotten its song’

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Environment, Science

A critically endangered Australian bird is being taught its own song in captivity in the hope of conserving the species in the wild.

Researchers found that around 12% of adult male regent honeyeater birds were singing the songs of other species instead of their own song.

It is thought that with 300 of the birds left in south-eastern Australia, they are so sparsely populated that some males have been unable to learn their song from other males.

Now a team from Australian National University has been helping captive honeyeaters learn the species’ song using sound recordings of wild birds.

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