Watch: This Little Bird Can Sing With Its Wings

The broadbill's strange song may set your heart aflutter.

Most birds have to open their beaks to sing, but when it comes to the dainty broadbill, all it has to do is wiggle its wings. In African and Rufous-sided Broadbills, circular flight displays (see the video below) are accompanied by a pulsing song that can be heard from more than 300 feet away. The brreeeeet sound, which resembles a , doesn鈥檛 come from vocalizations, but rather from the fluttering of wing feathers, as explained in a study published today in the Journal of Experimental Biology.

Some types of birds, such as hummingbirds and doves, can vocalize with both their syrinx鈥攖he avian equivalent of a voicebox鈥攁nd their wings and tails, says study author Christopher Clark, a researcher at the University of California, Riverside. Clark knew that broadbills make some pretty cool noises, too, but wasn't sure whether they came from the bill or the feathers.

To find out, Clark and his colleagues traveled to Uganda to take video and audio recordings of African and Rufous-sided Broadbills during their circular flight鈥攁 behavior the scientists speculate might be for romancing and defending territory. Back in the lab, they analyzed the clips and correlated the sound pulses with the down strokes of the wings. The scientists also noticed gaps between a handful of the 10 primary feathers鈥攍ocated at the outermost part of the wing and connected to the bird鈥檚 wrist bone.

To determine if the feathers were the source of the sounds, Clark put a dried African Broadbill wing and made it 鈥渇ly.鈥 The detached wing was able to reproduce the song, but it was still unclear which specific feathers were responsible.

Clark鈥檚 colleagues then returned to Africa to continue the study with wild birds. They removed less than an inch of the tips of target feathers from wild broadbills, and found that clipping certain ones changed the horn-like sound to something that more resembled a wind-up toy. This test helped them hone in on the 鈥渒ey players鈥 among the wing feathers.

Broadbills do have the ability to vocalize, Clark says, but only faintly; their flight sounds are their primary mode of singing. He thinks that somewhere along the line, 鈥渨ing song replaced vocal song鈥 in the birds, giving them a unique way of showboating their talents.