Amblyornis macgregoriae, De Vis, 1890

Diamond, Jared & Bishop, K. David, 2021, Avifauna of the Adelbert Mountains, New Guinea: why is Fire-maned Bowerbird Sericulus bakeri the mountains’ only endemic bird species?, Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club 141 (1), pp. 75-108 : 95

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.25226/bboc.v141i1.2021.a8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6D2353AF-B244-409B-AF02-944A06062AE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12724335

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0388A018-FFE5-FFCF-C4A0-FF61FE48C076

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Amblyornis macgregoriae
status

 

MACGREGOR’S BOWERBIRD Amblyornis macgregoriae View in CoL

We heard calls and saw two bowers at 1,525 and 1,565 m: one on the ridge crest, the other on a broad slope considerably below the crest. The bowers comprised a circular moss platform 1.07 or 1.22 m in diameter, with a raised rim 15 or 23 cm wide and 15 cm tall, built around a central sapling. Sticks up to 25 cm long were piled around the sapling to a height of 0.6 or 1.5ȱm.ȱTheȱplatform’sȱfloorȱconsistedȱofȱsoftȱbrownȱearthȱorȱmoss.ȱDecorationsȱatȱoneȱbowerȱ involved dozens of small (3 mm) straw-coloured seeds, pieces of black charcoal on the rim, and two piles of black charcoal outside the rim and on opposite sides of the bower from each other. Decorations at the other consisted of several dozen pieces of black charcoal on the rim; sprigs of 4-mm blue berries hung from seven thin saplings; an 8-cm piece of blue cloth on the rim; and, outside the rim, several dozen 8-mm dull olive-brown fruits, and one bright green beetle skeleton. The charcoal and cloth had presumably been brought from a considerable distance.

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