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Greater Prairie-Chicken
Greater Prairie-Chicken, male displaying
About the photographs
Greater Prairie-Chicken, female, June
Greater Prairie-Chicken, breeding male; June
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A grouse of open grassland, the Greater Prairie-Chicken is known for its mating dance. Males display together in a communal lek, where they raise ear-like feathers above their heads, inflate orange sacs on the sides of their throats, and stutter-step around while making a deep hooting moan. Cool Facts
Description
Medium to large chicken-like bird. Striped brown and white. Short, rounded tail. Wings rounded in flight. Sex DifferencesSexes similar, male has long tufts of feathers and orange sacs on the sides of its neck, and a solidly colored, not barred tail. ImmatureSimilar to adult. SoundDisplaying male makes booming "whhooo-doo-doooh." »listen to songs of this speciesRangeSummer RangeResident in scattered locations from South Dakota to Illinois and Texas. HabitatOpen prairie and oak savannah. FoodLeaves, seeds, buds, cultivated grains, and insects. BehaviorCourtshipMultiple males display at group display site, known as a lek. ReproductionCondition at HatchingDowny and able to follow mother. Conservation StatusEastern subspecies, known as the Heath Hen, went extinct in 1932. Texas form, the Attwater's Prairie-Chicken is critically endangered and at severe risk of extinction. Other NamesPoule des prairies (French) Sources used to construct this page:Schroeder, M. A. and L. A. Robb. 1993. Greater Prairie-Chicken (Tympanuchus cupido). In The Birds of North America, No. 36 (A. Poole, P. Stettenheim, and F. Gill, Eds.). Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences; Washington, DC: The American Ornithologists' Union. |
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