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| Grey Junglefowl | ||||||||||||||
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| Painting by John Gould | ||||||||||||||
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| Gallus sonneratii Temminck, 1813 |
The Grey Junglefowl, Gallus sonneratii also known as Sonnerat\'s Junglefowl is a wild relative of domestic fowl found in India. They are closely related to the Red Junglefowl but their ranges are largely non-overlapping. Cocks are immediately recognizable by their greyish plumage with fine patterns; the elongated neck feathers are dark and end in a small, hard, yellowish plate (visible as spots in the drawing); due to this peculiar structure they are popular for making high-grade artificial flies.US Fish and Wildlife Identification Notes [1] Accessed October 2006
Males have an eclipse plumage in which they moult their colourful neck feathers in summer during or after the breeding season.Morejohn, G. V. 1968. Study of the plumage of the four species of the genus Gallus gallus. The Condor, 70:56-65 Their loud calls of Ku-kayak-kyuk-kyuk can be heard in the early mornings and at dusk. They are found in deciduous forest and at the edges of moist deciduous forests. They forage for insects and worms by scratching on leaf-litter. They are threatened by hunting for food.
The species name is after the French explorer Pierre Sonnerat and they are sometimes also called Sonnerat\'s Junglefowl.
Call of male Grey Junglefowl from Wayanad, April 2006
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Call of Grey Junglefowl
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Call of Grey Junglefowl
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The Grey Junglefowl is found in most of Peninsular India, while the Red Junglefowl is found more along the foothills of the Himalayas. A region of overlap occurs in the Aravalli range. The species has been isolated by a variety of mechanisms including behavioural differences and genic incompatibility.Morejohn, G. Victor(1968) Breakdown of Isolation Mechanisms in Two Species of Captive Junglefowl (Gallus gallus and Gallus sonneratii) Evolution 22(3):576-582 Phylogenetic studies of Junglefowl show that this species is closely related to the Ceylon Junglefowl Gallus lafayetii and more distantly to the Red Junglefowl, Gallus gallus.Akishinonomiya Fumihito, Tetsuo Miyake, Masaru Takada, Ryosuke Shingut, Toshinori Endo, Takashi Gojobori, Norio Kondo, And Susumu Ohno (1996) Monophyletic origin and unique dispersal patterns of domestic fowls. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 93:6792-6795 [2]
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