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Birds have started using human items to impress their mates - including toy handcuffs
Researchers from the University of Exeter say bowerbirds in Australian cities are using human items to impress their mates.
Male bowerbirds are increasingly using plastic, glass, and other human-made objects to attract mates, showing how urban ...
Early results showed Peru's razor-tight presidential runoff Sunday remained too close to call, with four-time candidate Keiko ...
It is said that one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, but bowerbirds have turned refuse into an aphrodisiac, stealing ...
For millions of years, male great bowerbirds have wooed their mates with flowers and seeds. But in today’s urban world, such ...
According to a new paper published in the journal Royal Society Open Science by University of Exeter scientists, urbanization ...
Bowerbird males are well known for making elaborate constructions, lavished with decorative objects, to impress and attract their mates. Now, researchers have identified a completely new dimension to ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Urban bowerbirds prefer human-made items over natural materials for courtship
Unsual mating rituals are emerging in modern times. In a bizarre wild twist, a ...
NOVA: Do you think there are new bowerbird species left to discover? Borgia: It's possible. I think what may happen is that existing species may be split. Certainly with the Vogelkop bowerbirds that ...
Forget Chip and Joanna Gaines, bowerbirds are the real home renovation stars! These incredible avian artists have a keen eye for color and are masters of interior design, spending countless hours ...
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