About
The male Indian Peafowl, commonly known as the peacock, is one of
the most
recognizable birds in the world. These large, brightly colored
birds have a
distinctive crest and an unmistakable ornamental train. The train
(1.4-1.6
meters in length) accounts for more than 60% of their total body
length (2.3
meters). Combined with a large wingspan (1.4-1.6 meters), this
train makes
the male peafowl one of the largest flying birds in the world. The
train is
formed by 100-150 highly specialized uppertail-coverts. Each of
these
feathers sports an ornamental ocellus, or eye-spot, and has long
disintegrated barbs, giving the feathers a loose, fluffy
appearance. When
displaying to a female, the peacock erects this train into a
spectacular
fan, displaying the ocelli to their best advantage.
The more subtly colored female Peafowl is mostly brown above with
a white
belly. Her ornamentation is limited to a prominent crest and green
neck
feathers. Though females (2.75-4.0 kg) weigh nearly as much as the
males
(4.0-6.0 kg), they rarely exceed 1.0 meter in total body
length.
National Insignia
The Indian peacock,Pavo cristatus (Linnaeus), the national bird
of India,
is a colourful, swan-sized bird, with a fan-shaped crest of
feathers, a
white patch under the eye and a long, slender neck.
The peacock is widely found in the Indian sub-continent from the
south and
east of the Indus river, Jammu and Kashmir, east Assam, south
Mizoram and
the whole of the Indian peninsula. The peacock enjoys immense
protection. It
is fully protected under the Indian Wildlife Protection) Act,
1972.
Distribution and
Habitat
The Indian Peafowl occurs from eastern Pakistan through India,
south from
the Himalayas to Sri Lanka. Though once common in Bangladesh, it
may now be
extinct in that country. Its highly ornamental appearance
motivated early
seafarers to transplant the peafowl to their homelands in other
parts of the
western world. Phoenician traders in the time of King Solomon
(1000 B.C.)
introduced the birds to present-day Syria and the Egyptian
Pharaohs.

In
its native India, the peafowl is a creature of the open forests
and riparian
undergrowth. In southern India, it also prefers stream-side
forests but may
also be found in orchards and other cultivated areas.
Diet
Indian Peafowl do most of their foraging in the early morning and
shortly
before sunset. They retreat to the shade and security of the
forest for the
hottest portion of the day. Foods include grains, insects, small
reptiles,
small mammals, berries, drupes, wild figs, and some cultivated
crops.