Noisy Scrub-Bird

Apperance
The Noisy Scrub bird is small bird with short round wings, a graduated tail and strong pointed beak, brown above with a dark cross barring from its head to tail. The underside graduates in colour from pale buff to rust near its vent. The noisy scrub-bird has an extraordinary voice and can be heard calling loudly for a long time. It has a white throat above a black upper breast forms an inverted V shape. It has long legs and tail, and its wings are short and rounded.

Weight
22222

Length
The Noisy Scrub-bird is 21cm long of which 10cm is tail.

Habitat
The noisy-scrub bird spends more time on the ground than flying and has a territory of around 15 acres. The male defends its territory with the loud calls and imitations of other birds which give the bird its common name. A domed nest is built in shrubs close to the ground of rushes and decayed wood. The scrub-bird's habitat is dense coastal shrubland, including damp and densely vegetated gullies draining seaward and stunted gm trees on the flat heathland between the gullies.

Eating and Diet Habits
It eats frogs, lizards, insects, such as crickets and cockroaches, and seeds.

Predators
This bird is a food to many predators mainly feral cats and it is also a food for foxes.

Breeding Habits
 A domed nest is built in shrubs close to the ground of rushes and decayed wood. Breeding occurs in September or October and the female incubates the one or two eggs for approximately five weeks. Young fledge within four weeks.

Locations
 In 1961, the scrub-bird was rediscovered by a fisherman near Mt. Gardner in Two Peoples Bay, in an area that was slated for development. The planned development was relocated and the area was turned into a reserve. Under the protection enacted after its rediscovery, the bird naturally spread to a new site at the Angove River in 1979. In addition, populations were translocated to three new sites beginning in the 1980s: Mt. Manypeaks, Denmark-Walpole, and Mt. Taylor.

Numbers
In 1992, 291 singing males had been surveyed.

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