Australian Brushturkey vs Maleo
Alectura lathami comparé à Macrocephalon maleo
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Attribut | Australian Brushturkey | Maleo |
|---|---|---|
| Nom scientifique | Alectura lathami | Macrocephalon maleo |
| Ordre | Galliformes | Galliformes |
| Famille | Megapodiidae | Megapodiidae |
| Statut de conservation | Least Concern | Critically Endangered |
| Longueur | — | — |
| Envergure | 58,0 cm (22.8 in) | 58,2 cm (22.9 in) |
| Poids | 2390,0 g (84.30 oz) | 1543,75 g (54.45 oz) |
| Régime alimentaire | Omnivorous; scratches leaf litter for invertebrates, fungi, fallen fruits, and seeds in Australian rainforests and … | Forages in Sulawesi lowland forests for fallen fruits, seeds, and invertebrates scratched from soil and … |
| Taille de la couvée | 15-27 | 10 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Habitat Comparison
Habitats partagés
Australian Brushturkey only
Aucun(e)
Maleo only
Aucun(e)
Song & Call Comparison
Australian Brushturkey
Produces a loud, resonant booming call and deep guttural clucking notes. Territorial males call with repeated, low-pitched booming that carries through Australian coastal rainforest vegetation.
Maleo
Emits a loud, resonant boom call and deep clucking notes. The male's loud, far-carrying boom echoes across Sulawesi coastal forest; a dramatic sound during pre-dawn megapode activity.
Geographic Range & Migration
Australian Brushturkey
Resident along the eastern coast of Australia from Cape York Peninsula to eastern Victoria. Found in rainforest and wet sclerophyll forest.
Maleo
Endemic to Sulawesi, Indonesia. Found in lowland forest near geothermal areas used for nest incubation. Largely confined to coastal lowlands.
Statut de conservation
Australian Brushturkey
Maleo
How to Tell Them Apart
Australian Brushturkey
Predominantly glossy black with bare red head and neck; bright yellow wattle hangs from base of neck. Underparts show fine white barring on lower belly; tail is laterally flattened and …
Maleo
Upperparts black with brownish gloss; underparts white washed salmon-pink on breast and flanks; bare facial skin yellow with rounded black casque on crown. Bill yellowish; legs grey.
About These Birds
Australian Brushturkey
A large megapode (~2.4 kg) of family Megapodiidae, with bare red head, yellow wattle, and dark body. Inhabits rainforests and scrublands of eastern Australia. Males construct massive compost mounds of leaf litter to incubate eggs using fermentation heat, adjusting mound size to regulate temperature. Omnivorous. Least Concern; increasingly adapting to suburban gardens.
Maleo
A distinctive megapode (~1.5 kg) of family Megapodiidae, with a black casque on the crown, bare red facial skin, and salmon-tinted underparts. Endemic to Sulawesi, Indonesia. Travels to communal beach or geothermal nesting sites where solar or volcanic heat incubates eggs buried in sand. Critically Endangered due to habitat destruction, egg collection, and hunting.