Thieving Bird Apes Its Victims

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This is Scientific American 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber.Got a minute?
(Music plays)
Neil Young? No, that's Jimmy Fallon imitating Neil Young.
Doing impressions can be a valuable skill.
In fact, a bird called the fork-tailed drongo makes a good living at it, in its home in Africa's Kahalari Desert.
The drongo can mimic the alarm calls of another bird.
When that bird flees the imagined danger, the drongo swoops in to take any food left behind.
An animal mimicking another animal is not rare.
And targets can grow wise to the trick.
The drongo's real talent is that it can do the warning calls of multiple species.
Like how Jimmy Fallon can also do Van Morrison.
Researchers followed 64 wild drongos for nearly 850 hours.
Drongos do sound accurate alarms in response to actual predators.
But when they spot a tempting meal in another bird's possession, they send out a false alarm.
Here's one mimicking a pied babbler.
Another a glossy starling's alarm.
And here's a drongo mimicking a meerkat alarm.
The researchers saw almost 700 drongo attempts to steal food.
They estimate that any one drongo might know up to 32 different species' alarms.
And stolen food accounted for nearly a quarter of their daily intake.
The study is in the journal Science.
Fool birds once? Shame on them.
Fool birds multiple times? Success for the fork-tailed drongo.
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber.

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