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The Green Junglefowl exhibits an ice blue center in its comb.
Therefore the Green Junglefowl requires more protected conditions than chickens.
The wild Green Junglefowl is a mangrove forest adapted species.
The onagadori has also inherited the morphology of the Green Junglefowl tail.
The colouration of the Green Junglefowl is sexually dichromatic.
They have Green Junglefowl in their paternal ancestry.
The Green Junglefowl is the only species of junglefowl that produces tinted eggs.
It is from the Green Junglefowl that the non moulting genes and propensity to perch are derived.
The Green Junglefowl is being maintained and increasingly bred in captivity as its genetic diversity is disappearing.
At low tide, Green Junglefowl forage for starfish, small crabs, copepods and detritus.
Nuclear DNA studies provide evidence that the blue egg gene is derived from ancient Green Junglefowl founder sires.
The native peoples of the Sunda Archipelago learned that they could persuade young, unpaired wild Green Junglefowl males to mate with domestic game hens.
A culturally significant hybrid between the Red Junglefowl and the Green Junglefowl in Indonesia is known as the Bekisar.
The calls combine the prolonged notes of the Green Junglefowl with the added volume of domestic fowl, whose wild ancestors' voices had to be heard through dense vegetation.
Specialized plumes framing the throat of the male Green Junglefowl are highly light reflective and appear violet at the proximal and sky blue at the distal edges.
During the dry season, and also on arid volcanic islands, the Green Junglefowl gets most of its water from dew in the coastal fog on fruits and insects.
Domestic fowl can be crossed, and produce fertile offspring, with Silver Pheasants, Red Junglefowl and Green Junglefowl.
The Green Junglefowl is evaluated as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
The male is used in East Java, Bali and the surrounding islands in popular vocal competitions; this practice has caused the decline of wild Green Junglefowl populations.
Like the Green Junglefowl, Sri Lankan Junglefowl are island species that have evolved side by side with their similarly stranded island predators and competitors.
Like the Grey and Green Junglefowl, male Sri Lankan Junglefowl play an active role in nest protection and chick rearing.
Like its closer relative the Ceylon Junglefowl, the male Green Junglefowl exhibits vivid 'windows' of bare facial skin that contrasts against the dark scarlet red of the face.
While no species of wild junglefowl produce blue eggs, the Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius) produces slightly tinted eggs which vary from greyish white to a distinctly yellow stained-ivory.
The Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius), also known as Javan Junglefowl, Forktail or Green Javanese Junglefowl is a medium-sized, up to 75 cm long, bird in the pheasant family Phasianidae.
The journal Forktail is published once a year since October 1986.
The formal description as a species new to science appeared in the journal Forktail (Allen et al. 2004).
"If Twitter the Martin is the largest of our family, Forktail is the handsomest."
The forktail blue-eye (Pseudomugil furcatus) is a species of fish in the Pseudomugilidae family.
The Sunda Forktail feeds on aquatic insects and their larvae, as well as snails.
Eastern Forktail (Ischnura verticalis) is a member of the damselfly family Coenagrionidae.
If you'll just go over to Farmer Brown's barn and look up in the roof, you'll see Forktail's nest there somewhere."
The Little Forktail (Enicurus scouleri) is a species of bird in the Muscicapidae family.
This article is about the journal Forktail; for information about the bird from which it takes its name, see Forktail.
In the northeast corner of the park is Yosemite Marsh, a habitat for native species that include the forktail damselfly and flowering quillwort.
It was Forktail the Barn Swallow, the handsomest and one of the most graceful of all the Swallow family.
Numerous other species are present naturally, including forktail catfish, spangled perch, eel-tailed catfish, long tom, golden perch and archer fish.
Meiacanthus atrodorsalis, the Forktail blenny, is a species of combtooth blenny found in coral reefs in the western Pacific ocean.
Important papers published in Forktail include descriptions of two new bird species, the Bukidnon Woodcock in 2001 and the Calayan Rail in 2004.
The Fragile Forktail (Ischnura posita) is a member of the Ischnura genus and it grows between 21 and 29 mm.
The species is common in Sumatra, but is rarer in Java, where the White-crowned Forktail is more common.
His tones made it plain that the name of anguished, God-ridden Darwin was as distasteful as that of any other forktail fiend, Beelzebub, Asmodeus or Lucifer himself.
A number of birds were named after Leschenault, including Greater Sand Plover 'Charadrius leschenaultii', White-crowned Forktail 'Enicurus leschenaulti' and Sirkeer Malkoha 'Phaenicophaeus leschenaultii'.
"It's funny," remarked Johnny Chuck, "but as long as I've known Forktail, and I've known him ever since I was big enough to know anybody, I've never found out how he builds his nest.
Allen, Desmond, Carl Oliveros, Carmela Espaňola, Genevieve Broad and Juan Carlos T. Gonzalez (2004) A new species of Gallirallus from Calayan island, Philippines Forktail Vol.
The Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius), also known as Javan Junglefowl, Forktail or Green Javanese Junglefowl is a medium-sized, up to 75 cm long, bird in the pheasant family Phasianidae.
One can see a variety of Himalayan species along the way such as lammergeier, Himalayan griffon, blue-winged minla, spotted & slaty-backed forktail, rufous-bellied woodpecker, rufous-bellied niltava, khalij pheasant, variety of thrushes etc.
"Citrine" is used in the names of birds and other lifeforms with such colouring to describe their appearance, including the Citrine Wagtail, Citrine Warbler, Citrine Canary-flycatcher and Citrine Forktail.
This includes four nights in Corbett based at Camp Forktail Creek and forest rest houses inside the park with full board and all guided wildlife activities, plus four nights at Forsyth's Satpura, for £3,500 per person based on twin sharing.
Chestnut-naped forktail, Enicurus ruficapillus, Temminck, 1832, also known as the chestnut-backed forktail, photographed at Sri Phang Nga National Park, Phang Nga province on the Malay Peninsula in Thailand.
The Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius), also known as Javan Junglefowl, Forktail or Green Javanese Junglefowl is a medium-sized, up to 75 cm long, bird in the pheasant family Phasianidae.
While no species of wild junglefowl produce blue eggs, the Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius) produces slightly tinted eggs which vary from greyish white to a distinctly yellow stained-ivory.
The Bekisar, or Ayam Bekisar, is the first generation hybrid offspring of the Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius) and domesticated Red Junglefowl from Java (Gallus gallus bankiva).
The Green Junglefowl (Gallus varius), also known as Javan Junglefowl, Forktail or Green Javanese Junglefowl is a medium-sized, up to 75 cm long, bird in the pheasant family Phasianidae.
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