The unique and timid Malleefowl is an amazing bird
This large distinctive ground-dwelling bird is about the size of a small turkey. It has strong powerful legs, short bill and a flattish head. Predominantly grey in colour it has black, brown and white patterned back and wings. It is the master of camouflage. When standing motionless in dappled shadows it is almost impossible to spot.
It is the male bird’s role to construct and tend the nest-mound. The female lays the eggs and then departs; no further role is taken. Male birds spend about eleven months per year maintaining the mound which can be up to one metre high and five metres in diameter. The maintenance of a mound is basically as follows:
Autumn
The bird opens a depression about 300cm wide by 90cm deep. The soil is tossed to the edge to a height of about 45cm.
June–August
Organic material is collected (leaves, bark, twigs) and piled into the depression. Work then stops until sufficient rain has fallen to thoroughly soak the organic material. Once enough rain has fallen the material is covered by a layer of sand, sometimes up to a metre thick, and the material underneath begins to decompose.
Mid–late August
The male continually tests the mound for temperature by poking his bill into it. The decomposing material needs to reach temperatures of between 26°–30° before egg-laying commences.
Late September
First egg laid. The female signals by a low hunched approach and continuous crooning. The male opens the egg chamber which may take between 20–120 minutes. Once the egg is laid the chamber is covered. All eggs are laid at separate intervals sometimes over a period of three months. The incubation is by fermentation of organic material and solar power. Incubation takes between 7 –9 weeks.
November–December
The male bird adds or removes soil from the mound to maintain the constant incubating temperature. December: Chicks hatch. Birds are fully feathered at hatching and struggle to the surface of the mound unaided. They immediately leave the mound and seek shelter in the mallee scrub. Within 2–3 hours they can run swiftly and feed. There is no contact with either parent bird.
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