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The great bowerbird is a drab grey-brown crow relative that builds a stick avenue, then sorts thousands of bones and stones by size to bend depth, the same optical trick film crews use to cheat scale. A 2012 study in Science found that the better the illusion, the more it mated. Scramble the arrangement and it rebuilds the lie within days. Plain, common, and quietly running its own special effects department.
By Christopher KliebensteinThe great bowerbird is a drab grey-brown crow relative that builds a stick avenue, then sorts thousands of bones and stones by size to bend depth, the same optical trick film crews use to cheat scale. A 2012 study in Science found that the better the illusion, the more it mated. Scramble the arrangement and it rebuilds the lie within days. Plain, common, and quietly running its own special effects department.