: either of two Australian passerine birds (genus Menura) distinguished in the male by very long tail feathers displayed in the shape of a lyre during courtship
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Future studies may also explore whether other highly skilled vocal mimics, such as lyrebirds, share similar neural structures, offering further clues into the evolution of speech.—Ella Jeffries, Smithsonian Magazine, 21 Mar. 2025 The mating call of the male Albert’s lyrebird was differentiated into loud gronking and rhythmic gronking, and it was posited that the males’ shaking of stick piles or vine tangles may trick females into thinking predators are nearby.—Emily Harnett, Harper's Magazine, 26 Apr. 2024 For example, the start of winter in her local area in northern New South Wales is indicated by male lyrebirds singing.—Aarti Betigeri, Time, 14 Jan. 2020 The team noticed that species with particularly ancient lineages, such as lyrebirds, scrub-birds and New Zealand wrens, still build roofed structures—suggesting that ancestral passerine nests were domed.—Kat Long, Scientific American, 1 May 2017 Briefly, another fascinating surprise was the propensity of ravens to mimic human sounds, much like parrots or lyrebirds do.—James Floyd Kelly, WIRED, 12 July 2012
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