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Australia's national bird is the lyrebird, and the extraordinarily beautiful lyrebird is one of Australia's most prized birds.
Australians love the lyrebird's intelligence, beauty and melodious singing. Its appearance resembles that of a pheasant, and its tail feathers form a lace brocade coat, which is beautiful and spectacular.
The most famous feature is that the rooster has a magnificent tail, and is known for the magnificence of the tail feathers. The tail feathers of the lyrebird are very similar to a Greek lyre, hence the name "lyrebird". The lyre bird has many complex steps, light dancing, elegant and moving singing, and then the beautiful tail is poured to the back, which can really be called the famous "dancer" of the bird kingdom.
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Found in Australia and New Zealand, including Tasmania and its nearby islands, the lyrebird is a great lyrebird, a magnificent lyrebird and a Prince Albert lyrebird. The male lyrebird has beautiful feathers, with sixteen tail feathers facing forward, resembling a lyre. Both male and female, lyrebirds are very good at mimicking the sounds of nature and birds, but males are stronger.
In order to show off the land they occupy and attract the opposite sex, the male lyrebird often uses local materials and piles up small hills from the waste of the woodland as a stage for his performances. Then it unfolded its own tail on the stage, chirping loudly, singing and dancing. A male bird occupies a territory of several hundred meters, and it can build more than 10 such stages and take turns to perform.
The lyrebird is not only beautiful and magnificent, but also good at singing and dancing. It can not only imitate the chirping of various birds, but also learn the sounds of the human world. Such as the sound of car horns, the sound of train jets, the sound of axes and logging, the sound of road crushers and the shouts of the number leader.
With its melodious singing and dancing movements, it is one of the most beloved birds in Australia. Australia has also designated it as its national bird.
The lyrebird is a common name for two species of birds in the genus Lyrebird, the Lyrebird (Menura Novaehollandiae) and the Alber's Lyrebird (Menglas Alberti). It is large and light brown throughout. The male has a beautiful harp-shaped tail feathers up to 70 cm long and cm wide, and the outermost tail feathers are curled in an arc at the apex, adorned with golden-brown crown spots, with black edges, silvery-white on one side, and many golden-brown crescent-shaped markings on the other side, forming the two arms of the "qin"; The middle 12 tail feathers are slightly white, the branches are sparse, slender as silk; There are also 2 antennae-like feathers, the feathers are of equal length, wire-like, narrow and stiff, slightly curved, equivalent to the strings, located in the middle of the two "arms" that are curved.
The lyrebird is the longest bird in the passerine family. Females resemble males except for their tail feathers. The beak of the lyrebird is firm and straight, the feet are strong and good at walking, and it rarely flies.
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Australia's national bird, the lyrebird: the top of the tail curves like a harp, like an ancient harp.
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Australia's national bird is the lyrebird.
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Lyrebirds: Two species of Australian birds in the passerine family, named for the shape of their tail feathers that resemble a harp when courting and flaunting. The sound is also pleasant.
Terrestrial. The body is brown and resembles a pheasant. There are 1 genus, 2 species, and 4 subspecies, and the lyrebird can grow to the size of a domestic chicken, and its color is reddish-brown.
The male's outer tail feathers are classically harp-like in parts, while the inner tail feathers are lace-like. The tail feathers of the lyrebird shed in autumn and regenerate in spring. The lyrebird placed its dome-like nest on the ground, one nest at a time, with large brown spots and a purple tinge.
The lyrebird is the largest and is the oldest wood-perched bird. The lyrebird is good at running, not flying. Found in wooded areas of southeastern Australia.
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"Lyrebird" is a fantasy with animals as the protagonist**, which first caused a sensation in "Little Cherry, Good Boy", and was later published by Golden Shield Publishing House, and the famous children's literature writer and winner of the Lu Xun Literature Award Tan Xudong made a preface and recommendation for the book. The author, Tong Yan, is a well-known new generation of children's literature writers and local literature writers, born in Hebei in the 80s. The work mainly tells the story of a pair of beautiful lyrebirds that are separated by humans, and one of the birds (Qinming) goes through all odds to find its companion (Songxiao).
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