Catalog Number:
401232
Object/Specimen Description:

These specimens are down feathers from a farm hatched Wild Turkey. The eggs were of wild stock. The feathers measure approximately from 11 cm to 12 cm long and are all 6 cm wide.

Specimen Count:
3
Precise Locality:

Farm

Locality:
US Mid Atlantic (PA, NJ, MD, DE, DC, VA, WV)
Collecting Locality:
North America, United States, Maryland, Prince George's County
Upper Level Taxonomy:
Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Tetrapoda, Aves, Galliformes, Phasianidae, Meleagridinae

Gallinaceous birds (also known as game birds) spend the majority of their time on the ground, using their feet to scratch for seeds, fruit, and insects. Although their plumage tends to be mottled brown, providing camouflage, they are an attractive meal for terrestrial predators like raccoons and foxes. Their best defenses are their enlarged flight muscles, giving them the ability to take off in a hurry. Those same enlarged muscles are what make chicken breast a substantial meal for humans. But gallinaceous birds reserve flight for real emergencies, usually first running from danger on their strong legs. If running away is not enough, they burst off the ground in nearly vertical flight. When threatened, a gallinaceous bird communicates it with body language. Picture the puffed out chest and raised head of an angry chicken.