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March 12, 2025

Australia's superb lyrebirds 'farm' the forest floor to increase their prey, a behavior rarely seen in nature

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

In the wet forests of southeastern Australia, superb lyrebirds engage in extraordinary behavior—tilling the soil to create habitats for their prey to flourish.

The superb lyrebird scratches through the leaf litter and topsoil while foraging, using its powerful claws to search for such as worms, centipedes, spiders, crustaceans and insects.

This loosens the , allowing more air and water to infiltrate, and speeding up the decomposition of organic material. Our shows this creates an ideal habitat for the invertebrates on which it feeds—ensuring they grow large and ensuring the lyrebirds' future buffet.

So, lyrebirds essentially "farm" their food resource by cultivating the forest floor. This behavior is rarely seen in the non-human world. It extends across millions of hectares, potentially delivering far-reaching benefits to forest ecosystems.

A remarkable species

The superb lyrebird is mainly found in moist eucalypt forests in southeastern Australia. It is known for its mimicking song and, in the case of the males, ornate, lyre-shaped tail feathers.

Lyrebirds are considered "ecosystem engineers." This means their foraging changes the environment in ways that affect other species.

Our previous research has shown superb lyrebirds can move an astounding 155 tons of litter and soil per hectare of forest floor each year.

The scale of this disturbance suggests it must affect the invertebrates that live in the soil, including those on which lyrebirds rely for their food. Did this in turn benefit the lyrebirds themselves? Our research set out to test this.

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What our research involved

Our two-year project involved three sites in the tall forests of Victoria's Central Highlands.

At each site, we established three experimental plots (3m × 3m), each involving a different "treatment."

The first treatment involved fencing off the plot to create a lyrebird-free environment. We left these areas alone for two years.

The second treatment also fenced out lyrebirds. But at these, we visited monthly to rake the litter and soil, mimicking lyrebird foraging and scratching. We used a three-pronged, claw-like rake the same width as a lyrebird's foot. But unlike the lyrebird, we didn't eat the bugs we encountered!

In the third treatment, we marked the plots with metal stakes, but no fence. This allowed lyrebirds to forage as they pleased.

We collected a sample of soil and from each plot at the start of the study, and then again in each spring season.

Then, with help from a specialist insect scientist, known as an entomologist, we counted and classified the invertebrates in the samples—a whopping 197,880 creatures in all.

What we found

We compared samples from the fenced plots—both those that excluded lyrebirds and prevented them feeding, and those where we raked to mimic lyrebird foraging.

We found the raked plots had more types and a larger amount of invertebrates than the undisturbed plots. This suggests turning over the litter and soil creates conditions for invertebrates to thrive and grow bigger.

Then we compared samples from the raked plots and plots where lyrebirds had been free to forage. Again, invertebrates in the raked areas were bigger and more diverse. This was because in both treatments invertebrates had increased, but some had been eaten by lyrebirds in the unfenced plots.

These results provide evidence—albeit unsurprising—that lyrebird feeding affects the invertebrate community on the forest floor. But it also shows that lyrebird cultivation of the litter and soil allows invertebrates to rapidly increase in number and type, replacing what lyrebirds harvest.

Big benefits for forests

Our research shows lyrebirds scratch and modify the in ways that promote bigger and more diverse food sources. This makes it one of only a few non-human animals known to farm their prey.

Other well-known examples include , which grow elaborate fungus "farms" in their nest chambers. The ants weed out unpalatable fungi and select premium leaf matter to feed their crop.

And in West Africa, foraging by both the changes mudflats in ways that increase algal biofilms, their shared food resource.

The interaction between lyrebirds and invertebrates has wide benefits for forests. Invertebrates help cycle nutrients and disperse seeds. They also provide food for many birds, small mammals and reptiles.

In this way, the superb lyrebirds' farming-type behavior plays an important role in maintaining forest biodiversity. This fascinating behavior also provides yet another reason to celebrate the complexity of nature.

Provided by The Conversation

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Superb lyrebirds in southeastern Australia engage in a unique behavior by tilling the forest floor, which enhances habitats for their prey, such as invertebrates. This activity aerates the soil, accelerates organic decomposition, and promotes a diverse and abundant invertebrate community. The lyrebirds' foraging behavior, akin to farming, benefits forest ecosystems by supporting nutrient cycling and biodiversity, making them key ecosystem engineers.

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