Notas del episodio
Imagine walking through an ancient Australian forest and hearing a camera shutter, a crying baby, a dingo, and a roaring chainsaw, only to find a single ground-dwelling bird scratching in the dirt. The lyrebird is far more than a viral mimicry act.
This deep dive explores a 15-million-year-old lineage that is part master vocalist, part ecosystem engineer. From spectacular scientific blunders to the syrinx that lets one bird sing two tunes at once, we examine how lyrebirds farm the forest floor, why their songs are auditory peacock tails, and what their fragile future says about the soundscape we leave behind.
- The taxidermy mistake that gave the lyrebird its name and an entirely wrong display pose
- How relentless soil-tilling makes them ecosystem engineers and a natural fire-prevention mechanism
- The dual-voiced syri ...Â