Sage Grouse vs Painted Francolin
Centrocercus urophasianus dibandingkan dengan Francolinus pictus
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Atribut | Sage Grouse | Painted Francolin |
|---|---|---|
| Nama Ilmiah | Centrocercus urophasianus | Francolinus pictus |
| Ordo | Galliformes | Galliformes |
| Famili | Phasianidae | Phasianidae |
| Status Konservasi | Near Threatened | Least Concern |
| Panjang | — | — |
| Rentang Sayap | 61,2 cm (24.1 in) | 27,8 cm (10.9 in) |
| Berat | 2100,0 g (74.08 oz) | 291,0 g (10.26 oz) |
| Diet | Feeds almost entirely on sagebrush leaves and buds in winter; insects and forbs important in … | Eats seeds, grain, invertebrates, and plant material; forages in dry grass and scrubby areas of … |
| Ukuran Sarang | 7-15 | 4-8 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Habitat Comparison
Song & Call Comparison
Sage Grouse
Males produce extraordinary lek display: deep swishing 'swish-swish-coo-OO-ploop' using air sacs; low frequency, liquid, and otherworldly. Alarm is a cackling 'cac-cac'; females cluck softly.
Painted Francolin
Loud, insistent 'ka-TURR-ka' calls from Indian scrub; similar to Black Francolin but slightly higher and less grating. Alarm is rapid cackling cackle. Males call from termite mound or rock at …
Geographic Range & Migration
Sage Grouse
Resident in sagebrush habitat of the western United States and southwestern Canada. Found in semi-arid plains with Artemisia. Vulnerable.
Painted Francolin
Endemic to India; resident of open scrub, dry grassland, and farmland across most of peninsular India.
Status Konservasi
Sage Grouse
Painted Francolin
How to Tell Them Apart
Sage Grouse
Male has black belly, white breast, spiky pointed tail; yellow eye-combs; during display inflates yellow-green bare breast sacs exposing white feather ruff. Female mottled brown with dark belly patch.
Painted Francolin
Richly patterned; black above with large white spots; rufous-orange face and throat; white-spotted black flanks; rufous-chestnut underparts with black shaft streaks. Female lacks rufous on face; duller below.
About These Birds
Sage Grouse
The largest North American grouse (~2.1 kg), family Phasianidae, males with a spiked tail and inflatable yellow air sacs used in elaborate lek displays. Entirely dependent on sagebrush (Artemisia) ecosystems in the western United States and Canada for food and nesting. Feeds primarily on sagebrush leaves. Near Threatened; population severely declined due to widespread sagebrush habitat conversion.
Painted Francolin
A small Phasianidae francolin (~291 g) of rocky hillsides, scrub, and dry grassland across peninsular India and Sri Lanka. Both sexes are intricately spotted and streaked in rufous and white. Shy; detected by resonant calls. Feeds on seeds and invertebrates on the ground. Least Concern; common locally.