Peafowl |

An Indian Blue Peacock displaying
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Scientific classification |
Kingdom: |
Animalia
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Phylum: |
Chordata
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Class: |
Aves
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Order: |
Galliformes
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Family: |
Phasianidae
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Genus: |
Pavo
Linnaeus, 1758
Afropavo
Chapin, 1936
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|
Species |
Pavo cristatus
Pavo muticus
Afropavo congolensis |
The term peafowl can refer to any of three
species of
bird in the
genera Pavo and Afropavo of
the
pheasant
family,
Phasianidae. They are most notable for the male's
extravagant
tail, which it displays as part of
courtship. The male is called a peacock, the
female a peahen. Although commonly used, peacock
is an incorrect term to refer to both sexes.
The three species are:
- Indian Peafowl, Pavo cristatus (Asiatic)
Green Peafowl, Pavo muticus (Asiatic)
Congo Peafowl, Afropavo congolensis (African)
Overview
The
Asiatic peafowl genus Pavo includes the familiar
Indian Peafowl or Indian Blue Peafowl (Pavo
cristatus) and the much rarer Green Peafowl or
Dragonbird (Pavo muticus).
The Congo Peafowl is found in parts of Central
Africa.
The Green Peafowl breeds from Myanmar east to
Java. The IUCN lists the Green Peafowl as vulnerable to extinction
due to hunting and a reduction in extent and quality of
habitat.
Taxonomy
The two Pavo species will hybridize in captivity
although their ranges in the wild are non-overlapping.
Some taxonomists believe that the endangered Green
Peafowl is actually a complex of five distinct species
although they are currently treated as one species with
three subspecies
[1].
The Congo species has many differences from the Pavo
peafowl, but they are nevertheless its closest relatives.
Food
An Indian Blue Peacock's head
Peafowl are omnivorous and consume plant parts, flower
petals, seed heads, insects, and other arthropods, as well
as reptiles and amphibians.
Although possessing metatarsal spurs—"thorns" used for
kicking, they are used only for defence against predators.
Habitat
Asiatic peafowl like the Indian Blue Peafowl and
especially the Green Peafowl occupy a similar niche as the
roadrunners, Secretary Bird, and Seriema. All of these birds hunt for small animals,
minnows, and arthropods on the ground, in shallow streams
and frequently in tall grass habitats. Small snakes and
other reptiles are the preferred diet of wild peafowl.
Peafowl inhabit tropical savannah and riparian forests
where they hunt for small animals in close social units of
related birds that may span many generations.
Plumage
Closeup of an Indian Blue Peacock's tail
feathers
The male (peacock) has beautiful iridescent blue-green or
green coloured plumage. The so-called "tail" of the peacock,
also termed the "train," is in fact not the true tail but
highly elongated upper tail
coverts. The train feathers have a series of eyes that
are best seen when the tail is fanned. Both species have a
head crest.
The female (peahen) has a mixture of dull green, brown,
and grey in her plumage. She lacks the long tail of the male
but has a crest.
Females can also display their plumage to ward off danger
to her young or other female competition.
Many of the brilliant colors of the peacock plumage are
due to an optical interference phenomenon (Bragg reflection)
based on (nearly) periodic nanostructures found in the
barbules (fiber-like components) of the feathers.
Different colours correspond to different length scales
of the periodic structures. For brown feathers, a mixture of
red and blue is required—one color is created by the
periodic structure, while the other is a created by a
Fabry-Perot interference peak from reflections off the
outermost and innermost boundaries of the periodic
structure.
Such interference-based structural color is
especially important in producing the peacock's iridescent
hues (which shimmer and change with viewing angle), since
interference effects depend upon the angle of light, unlike
chemical pigments.
Behaviour
The peafowl are forest birds that nest on the ground. The
Pavo peafowl are terrestrial feeders but roost in
trees. They are weak fliers.
Peafowl are considered to be
polygamous. However in captivity, Green Peafowl and
African Peafowl are monogamous, with males assisting in nest
defense, chick rearing, and chick brooding. The male's bond
with offspring may extend indefinitely. First-year chicks
that have been weaned by their mothers generally join their
father's social unit to forage and rest.
In Green Peafowl, it is impossible to distinguish
juvenile and subadult green peafowls from their mothers and
hence their polygynous nature is hard to establish. There is
some anectodotal evidence suggesting that Green Peafowl may
have very complex social lives that may include the adoption
of one and two year old juveniles by their three and four
year old sub-adult siblings.
Peafowl are unusual amongst the
Galliformes in their capacity for sustained flight. All known genera of the peafowl family exhibit
complex flight displays.
A rear view of an Indian Blue Peacock's tail
feathers
Each race of the Green Peafowl has its own respective
wing shape and flight display behavior. Green Peafowls in
Java are often observed flying out to sea where the birds
gather on islets some miles from shore.
African Peafowl have unusually large wings in relation
to their weight. The wings have a highly unusual shape as
well. The African Peafowl or Afropavo wing is
prominently marked in both sexes in striking patterns and
colours.
All known species of peafowl perch on emergent trees that
stand above the canopy. Chicks of Indian Peafowl are sometimes carried on the backs of the
parent birds as they fly into the security of a tree to
roost.
Courtship
Although peafowl are capable of reproducing at the age of
2, peacocks do not reach full maturity until one year later.
At the age of 2, the feathers are not fully developed in
length and density. While peacocks at that age are
physiologically able to mate with peahens, they have very
little chance of competing with older peacocks with larger
feathers. At the age of 3, peacocks' feathers reach maximum
length for their lives, aside from the new feathers that
grow after they
molt in the late summer.
Mating season starts in the early Spring and ends in the
early Autumn. The peacock's courtship rituals include the
display of its startling plumage and a loud call. Recent
studies have shown that both the frequency and quality of
sexual plumage displays by males are reliable indicators of
the health status of an individual.
Gallery
An Indian Blue Peacock courts a Peahen
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An Indian Blue Peahen showing her plumage
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Detail of an Indian Blue Peacock’s display
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Side view of an Indian Blue Peacock’s
display
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Closeup of an Indian Blue Peacock's head
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When it is not in display, the long train
rests on the ground and hampers the
movements of the peacock
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A male Indian Blue Peacock, train "at rest".
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The White Peacock is frequently mistaken for
an
albino, but it is a colour variety of
Indian Blue Peacock
|
|
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Detail of an Indian Blue Peacock's tail
feather
|
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White Peafowl in the garden of Castle of
Pardubice
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Peafowl in the garden of Castle of
Pardubice
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In the media
NBC's 1950s "peacock" logo.
The US
National Broadcasting Company (NBC) has used three
variations of the rainbow peacock as its logo since
1956.
See also
References
External links