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An amazing great bustard gets ready for a new nature exhibition

Birds: Brilliant and Bizarre, now on view at London’s Natural History Museum, showcases the extraordinary qualities of Earth’s ā€œultimate survivorsā€
Senior conservator Nikki Harrison and Emanuele Casafredda work on a great bustard specimen
Lucie Goodayle / The Natural History Museum, London

Why were birds the only dinosaurs to survive the fateful asteroid that hit Earth 65 million years ago? A new exhibition sheds light on the extent of birds’ adaptability and the behaviours that allowed them to thrive in all niches.

, created by the UK’s Natural History Museum with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, pays tribute to the qualities of what it calls ā€œultimate survivorsā€. But it also shows how global challenges threaten that status.

In the main image, conservators prep a great bustard (Otis tarda) – one of the heaviest flying birds – for the exhibition. Once a familiar sight in the UK, the species is now classified as vulnerable.

The image below shows a Philippine eagle (Pithecophaga jefferyi), among the world’s largest eagles. There are only a few hundred pairs left, writes Joanne Cooper, a senior curator at the museum and author of a book that accompanies the show. The birds are scattered across four islands in the Philippines, and with deforestation encroaching, they are classed as endangered.

A Philippine eagle, one of the world’s largest eagles
Lucie Goodayle / The Natural History Museum, London

The exhibition runs at the Natural History Museum in London until 5 January 2025. The is on sale at its shop.

Topics: Birds