Males are renowned for building complex bowers from which they try to entice prospective mates by doing displays.
A bird immediately recognized by its riot of sunset colors, with its crimson top immediately bleeding into a belly colored a vibrant orange, set off by wings dipped into an inky black and equally hypnotic eyes.
Meet the Flame bowerbird
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
Photo Courtesy of Picuki/@dustinchen0728
One of the most brilliantly colored bowerbirds, the male is colored a striking almost crimson orange on his back which blends into a bright yellow belly, black wings, and tail with a yellow tip.
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686382036_316_A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
Photo Courtesy of Picuki/@sirhvideosrobles
The female is not as brilliantly colored as the male and is more of an olive-brown bird with a yellow around her belly,
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686382036_112_A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
Photo Courtesy of Picuki/@birdquest_tours
This species is native to and distributed throughout the rainforests of Papua New Guinea.
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686382037_443_A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
Screenshot via Video
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686382037_372_A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
Male bowerbirds are renowned for building complex bowers from which they try to entice prospective mates by doing elaborate displays.
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686382037_501_A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
Bowerbird species as a whole enjoy living in a range of habitats including rainforest, eucalyptus, and acacia forest, and shrublands.
![](http://thenewsday.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686382037_466_A-Bird-Whos-Crimson-Top-Bleeds-Into-A-Vibrant-Orange.jpg)
The flame bowerbird is evaluated as least concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Watch the grand display of the Flame bowerbird right here below:
![](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/1XkPeN3AWIE/hqdefault.jpg)
H/T Wikipedia – Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.