Often lined with feathers and fine soft dry grass, sometimes fur is also used. Nests are domed shaped, with a side entrance close to the top of the nest structure, constructed of loosely woven soft, dry grasses and bound with spiders’ webbing. The group comprises of the breeding pair, and up to 7 helpers which are often males that were raised on the same territory in previous years. It is also a cooperative breeder, with all members of the family group helping to feed the nestlings and rear young, as well as defend the territory. The Superb Fairy-wren is socially monogamous. Alarm calls are heard as a louder, repeated “chit”. CommunicationĬontact calls are a repeated, sharp, short “tsst”. Hops over ground and in shrubs and pounces on food. Eats mainly insects, including grasshoppers, ants, larvae, small seeds and fruits. The species forages mostly on the ground, more so than other species of fairy-wren also forages in low canopy areas of shrubs and trees. Also adapted to urban parks and gardens, and exotic weeds such as lantana. It inhabits dense understorey, and is usually seen in pairs or small groups. The Superb Fairy-wren is found in open eucalypt woodland forests of south-eastern Australia. Also found in Tasmania, King Island, Flinders Island, and Kangaroo Island. The Superb Fairy-wren is found in south-eastern Australia, from south-eastern Queensland, eastern NSW and throughout south-eastern Victoria, to southern Eyre Peninsula in South Australia. All other fairy-wren non-breeding males have much paler tail colouration. The non-breeding adult male looks similar to the adult female, except that the male has a black beak, and navy-blue tail – the Superb Fairy-wren is the only species of fairy-wren where the non-breeding male has a navy blue tail. The female has the same plumage year-round. The beak is orange-red, with a similarly coloured eye-stripe the tail is brown with a faint pale blue-grey tinge. The adult female is mostly brown, with white throat, breast and belly. Beak of the adult male is black and legs are brown to dark brown. The breeding plumage of the male Superb Fairy-wren is unmistakable – a light blue cap, ear tufts, and cheeks a black eye-stripe dark blue-black throat brown wings and white breast and belly. Females may be courted by up to 13 males in half an hour, and 76% of young are sired by males from outside the social group. Male Superb Fairy-wrens have been labelled as 'the least faithful birds in the world'. The Superb Fairy-wren was one of the first Australian birds to be described.
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