Black-browed babbler found in Borneo 180 years after last sighting
by Patrick Barkham from on (#5EMH9)
Exclusive: Stuffed specimen was only proof of bird's existence until discovery in rainforest last year
In the 1840s, a mystery bird was caught on an expedition to the East Indies. Charles Lucien Bonaparte, the nephew of Napoleon, described it to science and named it the black-browed babbler (Malacocincla perspicillata).
The species was never seen in the wild again, and a stuffed specimen featuring a bright yellow glass eye was the only proof of its existence. But now the black-browed babbler has been rediscovered in the rainforests of Borneo.
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