“At or around an active fire front, birds – usually black kites, but sometimes brown falcons – will pick up a firebrand or a stick not much bigger than your finger and carry it away to an unburnt area of grass and drop it in there to start a new fire,” says Bob Gosford, an ornithologist with the Central Land Council in Alice Springs, in the Northern Territory, who led the documentation of witness accounts. “It’s not always successful, but sometimes it results in ignition.”
“Observers report both solo and cooperative attempts, often successful, to spread wildfires intentionally via single-occasion or repeated transport of burning sticks in talons or beaks. This behaviour, often represented in sacred ceremonies, is widely known to local people in the Northern Territory,” write the authors behind the find in the Journal of Ethnobiology.
https://cosmosmagazine.com/biology/australian-raptors-start-fires-to-flush-out-prey
Australia is also known for angry trees, eucalyptus perhaps the angriest insomuch as fire is considered. But when it doesn't have any, it can still throw branches at you.
ReplyDeleteI did not need to know about that.
ReplyDeleteIn Yorkshire the trees are so dangerous they come with multiple warning signs.
ReplyDeletehttps://lh3.googleusercontent.com/EIwtTGoK7OowWLPXfLhx2f3E6vpub62dGKUX4SMwX_RgyExWpdUGA54KbelvLqF_NPPrBFvAkje9wc-i78whfwYzcaxabeJpUEFV=s0