Birds wanting to make more birds often do crazy stuff, and birders are well accustomed to encountering splendid plumage features, impossible feather structures, crazy dances, mad calls and complex songs on the birds they watch. I will therefore refrain from using superlatives to describe the courtship ritual of the male Great Bustard since the evaluation of what is better than the rest is such a subjective matter. However, I do believe that the display of the male Great Bustard is quite possibly unique in the avian world since it entails a complete transformation of the bird’s appearance. This change in appearance reaches a point where you not only scarcely recognise the wannabe groom as a Great Bustard, you’ll even have difficulties recognising it as a bird in the first place. In fact – and I am not making this up – I was very upset on my first visit to the Great Bustards in Germany when glancing with naked eyes over the meadows, I noticed a few large white pieces of plastic garbage that the wind had apparently blown into the nature reserve and I angrily thought that someone really should go remove them. Turns out it wasn’t garbage after all, it was my quarry of the day. And this happened even though I perfectly knew what to expect.

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To some birders, this is a large piece of white plastic garbage that the wind had blown into a nature reserve.

Therefore, I thought I should follow up on my last post on where and how to see Great Bustards in Germany with a short post showing their display ritual. Just in case you need additional persuasion to finally book a flight to Berlin…

The display of a male Great Bustard on lek can be divided into three phases, comprising neck, tail and wings:

  1. The bird inflates its neck considerably to the size of a water melon, leans forward and tucks in its head which has three effects: the head is completely hidden, the neck feathers on the front are spread upwards as if the wind had gotten into the plumage, and the thin but long whiskers attached to the base of the bill stick out into the air.
  2. Then, the tail is flipped over completely flat onto the back, fanning out the large white undertail coverts.
  3. Finally, the wings are spread slightly and lowered, with the primaries remaining closed and near the ground but the secondaries and white underwing coverts twisted forward to form an additional white fluff on both sides of the body, visually merging with the fanned-out white undertail coverst on the bird’s back.
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This may sound complicated, but honestly, it is. Therefore, and since I am certain that knowing exactly how this works will make you a better birder, I have decided to illustrate the process in a series of pictures I took here in Germany at the Havelländisches Luch, again heavily cropped because … you know … conservation. I’m glad Germany managed to hold on to some of her large white chunks of plastic garbage. The meadows just wouldn’t be the same without ’em…

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This is usually their starting position. The tail is often held slightly cocked throughout the day even when they are not primarily looking to impress the ladies but to catch some insects instead.

 

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Written by Jochen
Jochen Roeder was born in Germany and raised to be a birder. He also spent a number of years abroad, just so he could see more birds. One of his most astounding achievements is the comprehension that Yellow-crowned Night-herons do not exist, as he failed to see any despite birding in North America for more than two years. He currently lives near Heidelberg, one of the most boring places for a birder to live, a fact about which he likes to whinge a lot. When he is not birding or trying to convince his teenage son that patiently scanning some fields for migrants is more fun than staring at a smartphone, he enjoys contemplating the reasoning behind the common names of birds. He first became famous in the bird blog world on Bell Tower Birding.